I was in a mountain village with my wife's family. They served super hot fish. I went out for Chinese and was the only one to order one thing and the whole group ate something else. I got some serious digestive issues and had to stay close to home. But the next day I went back to the village. I decided just to eat broth and rice for the meal instead of the spicy red meat dishes. Previously, they'd served pork broth in a mug. So this day I got a mug of broth and poured it on my rice and ate it.
But I realized they were serving chicken and dog.... and this didn't take like chicken broth. So it turns out I have never eaten dog, but I kind of drank it, or ate rice that had been soaked in dog juice... or broth.
Another time I was at a Chinese restaurant with the food on a lazy susan and a little tiny plate. I saw what I thought were maybe quail legs and put one on my plate. Since it was on my plate, I ate it anyway. It tasted like chicken, but very, very tender.
Once my wife and I went to the beach in Bali. We saw what we though was a vendor probably cooking pork sate-- meat on a skewer. They smother it with some kind of sauce so you can't see the meat (balinese sauce is usually made of red pepper.) So my wife came back and said they weren't selling but they gave her a couple of sticks. I tried it and it was a kind of sweet dark meat. It turns out it was turtle. Now, the Balinese eat two kinds of turtle-- one endangered and the other not. And do you know what it tasted like..........?
Like California condor.......
Just kidding. I have never eaten California condor.
I asked some Koreans, in Korea, what to order at the Korean Chinese restaurant. One suggested Ool myun. I didn't know that ool was seafood. So I ordered it, didn't like that the shrimp in it wasn't pealed, got my hands dirty, at the soup and the noodles. When I got to the bottom, there was a snail?
Many years later, I tried some of the little snails they served at a Korean restaurant. Meh. Wasn't great. I'd rather eat something that isn't snails. I also ate squid with hot pepper sauce for breakfast soon after I moved to Korea. I was asked to join someone for breakfast.
An Australian friend of mine raised by missionaries in Kalimantan (Indonesian Borneo) had stories of boar hunting, including jabbing one and killing it as it charged him with a bamboo spear. So he goes boar hunting and brings some meat back. It tasted like beef.
I have eaten water buffalo. I read water buffalo is supposed to be more tender than beef. But not the steaks I had. They must have gotten those water buffalo before they went to the retirement home. They were gristle. I've also had some water buffalo (the variety served without cooked blood) cooked with some overly bitter and spicy Indonesian peppers at my wife's family reunion. I asked if they cooked the whole thing that way. Someone said yes, but the next morning, I had a bit of tasty beef stew that someone had apparently taken from one of the buffalos. It was like beef, but with strands of flesh that were more noticeable. They are used for oxen or work animals, so that may be why.
I've also tried bison and ostrich. They taste the same to me-- like beef with almost no fat content in the meat. I'd prefer bison, though, a kosher animal more similar to a cow.
If you have eaten carp you may think of a nasty gray fish meat, but I have had a variety of giant goldfish from the Toba area in Sumatera that is some of the fluffiest tender fish that I have had.
Once I was eating some hashbrowns the maid where i lived had cooked for breakfast. My mouth was filled with a mango flavor. I felt around and pulled one of those bugs that was on the mango tree out of my mouth. I don't know what was more disturbing, the fact that I had eaten the bug or the fact that it tasted so good.