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the mag
The World’s 10 Messiest Food Festivals
by the mag - June 12, 2009 - 2:45 PM

by Brendan Spiegel

If your mother told you never to play with your food, she probably didn’t grow up in any of these towns. Whether the food is being worshipped, chased, sculpted, or thrown, we’ve found 10 spots around the world where picking at your plate isn’t just acceptable, it’s encouraged.

1. Italy’s Orange Battle

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Every year, townspeople in Ivrea, Italy, celebrate the three days before Lent by pelting one another with oranges. According to legend, the feudal lord of medieval Ivrea was so stingy that he gave his peasants only one pot of beans every six months. In protest, the villagers would throw the beans into the streets. Over the years, the beans were replaced by oranges, which grow plentifully throughout Southern Italy. The custom now known as the Orange Battle involves revelers standing on parade floats and launching the fruit at fellow participants. And it’s not uncommon to see a little blood mixed in with all that orange juice. Visitors can join in, but you’ll probably want to bring some goggles and a helmet.

2. 
Cheese Rolling at Cooper’s Hill

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Each spring, a large wheel of cheese is rolled down a steep hill in England, and dozens of British men go tumbling after it. They risk sprained ankles, broken bones, and massive bruising. The big prize? The winner gets to keep the cheese.

While no one knows exactly how or why the first cheese race took place, local legend pegs the tradition on the ancient Romans. The event hasn’t always been smooth rolling, though. It hit a rough patch during World War II, when rations made dairy difficult to come by. Instead of sprinting after a full hunk of Double Gloucester, contestants raced after a tiny slice placed inside a wooden wheel. A far greater threat to the competition came in 1997, when so many competitors were injured that authorities implemented some major changes. The following year, the cheese was allowed to roll down the hill, but no one could run after it. Thankfully, the toned-down version of the sport lasted just one year. In 1999, authorities introduced a few more safety measures and then let the cheese chasing resume. The games at Cooper’s Hill have been going strong ever since.

3. 
The Lopburi Monkey Festival

Like many places in Thailand, the city of Lopburi is overrun with macaque monkeys. They swing freely through the streets, hitch rides on top of cars, and snatch food from the hands of unsuspecting tourists. But even though the animals are annoying, the Thais worship them. According to Hindu legend, a god named Hanuman (the Monkey King) once ruled this region. In his honor, the city celebrates once a year by feeding its 2,000-plus monkeys a huge buffet overflowing with tropical fruits, flavored rice dishes, and modern treats such as Coca-Cola.

4. 
Night of the Radishes

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When Spanish explorers brought radishes to Mexico in the 16th century, farmers near the modern-day city of Oaxaca quickly started farming the veggies. Unfortunately, nobody wanted to buy them. Not knowing what to do with all the extra produce, venders began carving the radishes into ornate shapes and using the vegetable sculptures to lure customers to their produce stands. Amazingly, it worked. The novelty items became so popular that farmers began leaving their radishes in the ground long after harvest season, letting them grow into bizarrely shaped behemoths. Now, December 23 is known as Noche de Rabanos (Night of the Radishes). Oaxacans celebrate it each year by gathering in the town square to display and admire elaborately detailed radishes modeled into saints, nativity scenes, and even the town itself.

5. 
Turkey’s Greasy Wrestling Competition

The Turkish sure do love their olive oil. In fact, they’re so obsessed with the stuff that it plays a leading role in one of their treasured national pastimes—the Kirkpinar wrestling contest. At nearly 650 years old, the tournament is one of the world’s longest continuously 
running sporting events. It’s also one of the most popular. Each June, more than 1,000 competitors cover themselves in a slick coat of olive oil before entering the ring. All that grease makes for some comically slippery bouts, but that doesn’t stop the Turks from taking this event seriously. Millions of spectators turn out for the three-day tournament, and the champion (crowned the “Big Hero”) is honored as the country’s preeminent sports star.

6. 
La Festival Gastronomico del Gato

In the small Peruvian farming town of La Quebrada, people have a strange way of honoring their ancestors; every September, they gorge themselves on cats. The locals host the epic feline feast to pay homage to the town’s settlers—impoverished slaves who once survived on nothing but cat 
meat. Despite outrage from animal-rights activists and feline lovers around the world, the festival only grows more popular each year. Recent feasts have even offered more creative options for foodies, such as cat Milanese and grilled cat with Peruvian black mint. Devotees say it tastes like (what else?) chicken.

7. The West Virginia Roadkill Cook-Off

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Never let it be said that West Virginians can’t poke fun at themselves. The annual Roadkill Cook-Off embraces the state’s hillbilly image by celebrating a 1998 law that allows people to cook any meat found on the side of the highway. The festival’s motto—“You kill it, we grill it!”—sums up the menu perfectly; it’s a smorgasbord of scavenger’s delights, including deer fajitas, BBQ buzzard, and squirrel gravy over biscuits.

8. Greece’s Clean Monday Flour War

Many parts of the world go crazy during Carnival, but in the Greek seaside town of Galaxidi, it’s all about the day-after festival, known as Clean Monday. That’s when locals pummel each other with bags of multicolored flour, powdering the entire town like a doughnut. The food coloring in the flour is strong enough to stain old buildings, so before they unleash more than 3,000 lbs. of the stuff in the streets, the people of Galaxidi cover much of the city in plastic.

9. 
The Mame-Maki Ritual

For centuries, the Japanese have marked the beginning of spring as a time to drive evil spirits out of their homes. The most common method for achieving this is the mame-maki ritual, during which families toss roasted soybeans around their houses and chant “bad luck out, good luck in!” At the end of the ritual, participants pick up and eat a bean for each year of their lives, assuring good fortune for the year ahead. Nowadays, children can be seen madly tossing beans onto the street, while celebrities and monks alike host parties in large temples and shower the crowds with soy.

10. 
Shepherd’s Shemozzle

Leave it to the Kiwis to out-weird us all. Hunterville, New Zealand, is home to the Shepherd’s Shemozzle, a 2-mile race in which shepherds and their dogs trek through an obstacle course that offers a different eating challenge each year. Past trails have included sheep’s eyes and oil-marinated bugs, but the 2008 contest may have been the strangest of them all. Contestants had to run 50 meters while clenching raw bull testicles in their teeth. Then, before the taste was out of their mouths, they had to eat a brick of dry Weetabix cereal, followed by a raw egg and a warm can of beer.

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Comments (12)
  1. I’m suprised there is no mention of La Tomatina. Maybe because it is arguably the most famous food fight of them all.

    See my name for link.

  2. Great article!
    Also, Night of the Radishes would be an excellent band name.

  3. Hey, mental_floss, you forgot the largest food fight in the world. It’s in Buñol, Spain & it involves lots & lots of red tomaotes. And you call yourselves a trivia magazine.

  4. how could you possibly forget la tomatina?!

    there’s also a candy fight in vilanova i la geltru here in catalunya

  5. side note to the WV Roadkill law. You can only eat the road kill that you hit. It is illegal to randomly pick up the road kill and take it home. It also will not count against your count for your hunting license.

    “State Senators attached numerous ryders to the bill in order to get it passed. The bill does not allow for people to drive their vehicles through the front walls of restaurants in order to get some free food, and it is not applicable for humans who are hit by cars. However, vehicle operators are allowed to swerve and hit an animal they think looks particularly tasty, provided that animal is not on a leash, and/or being walked by a human.” – Charleston area newspaper when it was passed.

  6. I was surprised there was no La Tomatina! Maybe you should add that one in.

  7. Thanks for including the Orange Battle at Ivrea – I attended one several years ago while living in the north of Italy and had no idea what to expect – it’s definitely much more brutal than La Tomatina as the oranges are shipped up from the South well before the festival and refrigerated to keep them ready to go – as well as the fact that it’s usually a freezing cold day, it inevitably results in rock-hard oranges and many bloody noses and other equally bad war wounds.

    Spectators are supposed to wear red head-wear to signify that they don’t want to be hit, but there’s many mistimed and poor throws which really hurt! but village and familial pride is on the line – the wagons and team uniforms proudly display their crests and there are always crowd favourites.

  8. Ha… we’ve done so many things on the La Tomatina, that we figured it’d be fun to leave it off of this list.

  9. they left it out on purpose so we would have something to comment about

  10. I am disgusted at the people participating La Festival Gastronomico del Gato. Why would anyone eat a poor cat. I have two cats and I want to go beat up the Peruvians!!

    Ugh!

  11. How about the Telluride Tomato War that happens every September in Telluride CO?
    They throw tomatoes at each other and whoever gets hit above the waist is dead. It’s a lot of fun.

  12. What about the bloody battle in Key West? There’s plenty of food thrown there!

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