Chemicals added to preserve the shelf life of the meat
Chicken can sometimes smell like sulfur due to the presence of certain compounds in the meat, such as hydrogen sulfide, which is released when the chicken is cooked or stored improperly.
Consuming sulfur-rich foods like eggs, meat, or cruciferous vegetables can result in poop smelling like sulfur. This smell is due to the breakdown of sulfur compounds during digestion, which can produce hydrogen sulfide gas with a distinctive odor. If the smell persists or is accompanied by other symptoms, it may be worth consulting a healthcare professional.
Farts can smell eggy due to the presence of sulfur compounds like hydrogen sulfide, produced by bacteria in the digestive system as they break down food. Eating sulfur-rich foods like eggs, meat, and dairy can also contribute to the eggy smell.
Red meat can have a slight blood smell. Other than that it should not smell. Red meat should never smell unpleasant, or like eggs.
Spoiled lamb has a potent odor due to bacterial growth and the actual meat spoiling. If the meat is bad, it will usually have a strong sulfur or ammonia-like smell to it.
Because it has a fleshy meat consistency that closly resembles human flesh. So if you boiled human flesh it would smell just like boiled watermelon juice?
stick it in a bucket of meat :D
Yes. Some people like it. The bear has a very musky smell, which I can say doesn't smell like a goat sheep, but the only way I can relate the permeation of the meat with the same smell. Bear meat is greasy and has "that" taste. I am sure there are recipes that someone has, somewhere, that they will tell you makes the meat delicious. I, personally, feel it is an acquired taste.
They do not smell like crap - they have a grassy smell to them - we might smell just as bad to them as we are carnivores and eat meat whereas they only eat plants.
Considering that humans are ,in fact ,animals it would make sense that human blood would have a similar smell to animal blood.Which we would find on our grocery and meat market shelves. The smell would be altered by diet,illness etc,but the fact remains blood smells ...well...like blood.
Meat, there is nothing a dog likes more than meat.
depends on where you bought it from. if some cheapp piece of crap place then they might of injected it