 Welcome to Spotlight. I'm Liz Wade. And I'm Adam Navas. Spotlight uses a special English method of broadcasting. It is easier for people to understand, no matter where in the world they live. The fugu fish is extremely poisonous to humans. Some people say it is hundreds of times more deadly than the poison cyanide. And there is enough poison in one fugu fish to kill 30 people. Would you want to eat this fish? It can be safe if it is prepared correctly. But if a person eats a piece of incorrectly prepared fugu fish, he will die. Preparing fugu is a difficult job. Before a person can prepare fugu, she spends at least two years studying under a master chef. She must pass a special fugu test. The test is very difficult. One third of people taking the test fail. Fugu is unsafe to prepare and eat. It costs a lot of money. And it can have a weak taste. But fugu is very popular. So why would so many people want to eat it? Fugu is taboo. Taboos are very important in any culture. A taboo describes something that is set apart. It is usually something that a person should not do for a particular reason. A taboo food is a food that most people will not eat. But a food that is taboo in one culture may not be taboo in another culture. But what makes food taboo in one culture and acceptable in another? Today's spotlight is on foods that are taboo. People have strong opinions about what is good to eat and what is not. Fugu comes from Japan. But food taboos exist all around the world. For example, in many countries people do not eat dogs. This is because people keep dogs as pets, as their animal friends. But in some countries eating dog meat is not taboo. For example, in some parts of Asia people eat dog meat. In these places eating a dog would not be a taboo. Some food taboos come from religion. What we eat is sometimes connected to what we believe. People eat cows in many parts of the world. But to Hindus in India cows are taboo. The people there choose not to eat these animals. Some taboos develop out of tradition. Food taboos can celebrate a common history and bring people together. Every February the people of Iceland hold a celebration called Thoroblatt. This is a celebration of Iceland's history and culture. And food is an important part of Thoroblatt, especially taboo food. Usually decaying food is an important taboo. Decayed food can have dangerous bacteria. But at Thoroblatt one of the important foods is called haukarl. It is a decaying or fermented shark meat. Sharks are large dangerous fish. Sharks are found in many places around the world. But in Iceland the sharks contain many particular chemicals to protect them from the freezing water. These chemicals make the shark poisonous to people. So to eat the shark meat cooks must use an unusual method. Traditionally a person removes the shark's head and insides. They set the shark on sand. Then they cover it with more sand and heavy rocks. This will press the liquids out of the shark's body. It stays like this for 6 to 12 weeks. After the shark is cured like this it is cut into long thin pieces. Pieces hang to dry for a few months. They develop a hard brown outer layer. It also has a particular smell. The shark meat is now fully fermented. The outer layer is cut off and the shark is cut into smaller pieces. People say that when you are going to eat haukarl you should not smell it first. That is because the finished haukarl smells like liquid human waste. But people say it tastes like cheese. Icelandic people say that eating the shark is a way to remember their history and culture. Even today you can find haukarl almost anywhere in Iceland. Even in grocery stores. Another reason people eat taboo foods is because they believe the foods will give them health benefits. For example, in Asian countries some people eat the male sex organ of a bull, a male cow. This food taboo has a special effect. People believe it will give them a strong desire for sex. This thinking is not always based on modern medicine. Instead it is part of a long tradition that connects eating well to good health. After all, food was the first medicine. Not all food taboos have a tradition that goes back many hundred years. Until 1947, India was under British rule. During this time, children with one British parent and one Indian parent were rejected by both cultures. These rejected people formed a separate culture. It has its own rules about food. One special food is koodi pie. Koodi pie is made from a taboo food, a fetus. A fetus is an unborn animal taken from the body of its mother. Usually people make koodi pie using a goat fetus. But people do not eat koodi pie often. It can only be made when a pregnant animal is killed. This food is so taboo that sometimes meat sellers will not admit to selling it. They will only deliver it in secret. Food is important to us. It is easy to react to taboo foods with emotion. New or strange foods may be the most difficult thing to accept about a new culture. When we hear what other people eat, it is easy to judge them. It is easy to believe that since they eat strange things, they must be strange people. But we can remember that what people do is more important than what they eat. How people love is more important than what they cook. And the food they put in their mouth is not as important as the words that come out. Would you eat koodi pie? What about decaying shark meat? Have you tried a strange food from another culture? Tell us what you think. You can leave a comment on our website or email us at contact at spotlightenglish.com. You can also find us on Facebook, YouTube, Instagram, and Twitter. Members are thanked in every video. Get access to exclusive content and PDFs of scripts and can join our private Spotlight English Facebook group. If you are on YouTube, click Join below. The writer of this program was Adam Navas. The producer was Liz Wade. The voices you heard were from the United States. You can listen to this program again and read along with it at www.spotlightenglish.com. This program is called Taboo Food. Would you eat this? Visit our website to download our free official app for Android and Apple devices. We hope you can join us again for the next Spotlight program. Goodbye.