Snakes on a plate: Vietnam's coiled cuisine

By AFP    September 11, 2018 | 01:50 am PT
With their meat served up in a wide array of dishes and blood added to rice wine, snakes make a reputedly satisfying and nourishing meal in Vietnam.

Caught in the jungles of the north of the country, snake flesh is traditionally believed to help with cooling overheated body temperatures, relieving headaches and easing digestion.

Snakes on a plate: Vietnams coiled cuisine

Snake meat is served in Vietnam. Photo by AFP/Nhac Nguyen

Restaurants will cook it steamed or fried with lemongrass and chilli and serve it with a rice wine mixed with snake blood, said chef Dinh Tien Dung, who works at a restaurant in Yen Bai province three hours northwest of the capital Hanoi.

Holding a snake's head with one hand, Dinh Tien Dung slit its body near the head with a knife and squeezed blood out of it, dripping it into a cup of rice wine.

"We make use of every part of the snake except its head and its scales, " said the 32-year-old.

Snakes on a plate: Vietnams coiled cuisine - 1

Snakes are being processed at a restaurant in Yen Bai Province in northern Vietnam. Photo by AFP/ Nhac Nguyen

Locals believe that only men over 50 should drink snake wine, as younger males are likely to experience "backache or impotence, " said restaurant owner Duong Duc Doc.

As for its flesh, the benefits to eating it are numerous, said snake-catcher Dang Quoc Khanh, a 35-year-old who has been trapping serpents in the jungle since he was a young boy.

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A dash of snake blood can also be added to rice wine, although locals believe that only men over 50 should drink it, as younger males are likely to experience backache or impotence. Photo by AFP/Nhac Nguyen

"Snake meat is a very good food, " he said, "It's delicious, good for your health and good for your bones."

But wildlife expert Ioana Dungler from Four Paws International said killing wild snakes and disturbing the jungles' ecosystem is unnecessary as global meat production should be sufficient.

"The whole process of these animals ending on a plate or in a drink is very painful... and it's done for purposes that are not justified, " Dungler told AFP.

 
 
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