Carl Linnaeus, The Lapland Journey, translated by Peter Graves (Edinburgh: Lockharton Press, 1995), p. 192.
Northern Husbandry, 24/09/1732, ¶1118:
Their food contains very little meat and, what there is of it, is mostly broken-up fatty bones; they get to keep a little of the leg, a couple of pieces of shoulder or brisket, very little mutton, all the rest being sold. The heads and feet of small animals, goats, pigs and sheep are dried and boiled; they taste good with peas if they have been salted first.