- (Sardinian: [ˈkazu ˈmaɾtsu]; lit. 'rotten/putrid cheese'),
sometimes spelled casu
marzu, and also
called casu modde, casu cundídu and casu fràzigu in Sardinian...
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Marzu (Persian: مرزو, also
Romanized as
Marzū; also
known as Mazrū) is a
village in
Rostaq Rural District,
Rostaq District,
Darab County, Fars Province...
-
called casu martzu,
which means 'rotten cheese'. As it is illegal, casu
marzu is
primarily sold
through the
black market.
Meals may be
finished with a...
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Aboriginal Australian cuisine,
which can be
eaten alive and raw or cooked. Casu
marzu is a
traditional Sardinian sheep milk cheese,
notable for
containing live...
- 262–263. doi:10.1001/jama.1952.72930200005011b. PMID 14927333. Petroni. "Casu
marzu: The world’s ‘most dangerous’ cheese", CNN Travel, 18
March 2021. Retrieved...
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portal German cuisine List of
German cheeses List of
cheeses Mimolette Casu
marzu "Würchwitzer Milbenkäse". Slow Food
Deutschland e.V.
Article 2(b) at eur-lex...
-
restriction was
lifted in 2014. Food
portal List of
cheeses Milbenkäse Casu
marzu Cuisine and
specialties of Nord-Pas-de-Calais
Wikimedia Commons has media...
-
Caciocavallo Caciotta Caș
Casciotta d'Urbino
Castelo Branco cheese Casu
marzu Cazelle de
Saint Affrique Cherni Vit
Corleggy Cheese Croglin Crozier Blue...
-
Archived from the
original on 2022-05-13.
Retrieved 2023-03-18. "Casu
Marzu - nice
Italian cheese,
which is
illegal and has
thousands of
maggots by...
- safe and
effective treatment for
chronic wounds. The
Sardinian cheese casu
marzu is
exposed to
flies known as
cheese skippers such as
Piophila casei, members...