most likely what it says... it's soup made out of calf head...
Mock Turtle Soup
calf's head
This soup is called Mock Turtle Soup. It was invented as a cheaper version of green turtle soup. Green turtle soup is now illegal, considering the green turtle is a protected species.
There are different variables as to why. First of all, I hope the calf was born alive. It could've been that it tore the birth canal opening as his head emerged. This can happen if the calf is either big or has a big head.
Goats Head Soup was created on 21-11-25.
A Hawkeye
Chicken Soup for the Soul - 1999 A-Head of the Game was released on: USA: 14 December 1999
In Tenniel's illustrations, the Mock Turtle is depicted as a sea turtle with the head, rear legs and tail of a cow.In Victorian times, turtle soup was very popular, but expensive, so poorer people ate mock turtle soup (mock means fake). It was commonly made with veal (cow calf). Tenniel's illustration reflects this, although Carroll makes no reference to it in his original text.Follow the link below to see Tenniel's impression of the Mock Turtle
seacon, bubbles, flubber, shelly, will, willy, and bubbly.
French onion soup does not always come in a lion's head bowl. When it does, it's because of tradition. Lion's head bowls are designed in a classic French style. Many restaurants in the United States serve French onion soup in ramekins.
In the calf, the esphageal groove works by contracting muscles in such a way so that the fluid (being milk) that the calf drinks by-passes the rumen and heads straight for the abomasum. The calf's head as to be tilted up and out in order for the groove to properly work. As the calf ages and the rumen reaches maturity, this groove disappears.
The Mock Turtle is a character in Lewis Carroll's book Alice's Adventures in Wonderland.He is named after mock turtle soup, which was very popular in England at the time the book was written. Turtle soup was considered a delicacy, but as turtle was too expensive for most people they made fake, or mock, turtle soup instead, usually from calf's head and offal.Carroll clearly found the idea that a mock turtle would be a real animal quite funny (in much the same way that Scottish people occasionally joke about hunting for wild haggis)