Food Tube ([info]foodtube) wrote,
@ 2007-02-18 23:08:00
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Snake Soup
What it is: Snake Soup

Location: Backstreet restaurant, Gongbei




I haven't posted a review for a while, and snake seemed to be the obvious last thing to try before I leave this city next week. A friend told me there was a restaurant specializing in Snakes in the Macau-bordering city area of Gongbei. I went there on Chinese New Year's Eve, to find most of the shops and restaurants boarded up or shuttered down. It took a good half hour of wandering before I found one that was open. Fortunately it turned out to be the one I was looking for.



Outside there were cages full of snakes.



These are bred in snake farms in the next province and shipped down in boxes. I asked how much it was for a big snake. It was 750 yuen, which works out at about 50 of our British pounds, way out of my price range. Smaller snakes were available for as little as 300 yuen, still too much for me. A little bargaining later he agreed to make a little snake soup for 25.
It came in a couple of minutes.



It looked like a normal Cantonese-style soup, only perhaps a little thicker than usual. The cloudy colour you can see is, I think, glutinous rice. I took a sip.



It din't really taste of much at all - just a plain vegetable stock broth, but as thick as a "western" soup and with a very slight spicy heat.
The solid contents were shredded onions, carrots, red cabbage and snake.



The bits of snake were fairly small, but recognisable as reptilian as the skin remained intact on each piece.



I didn't know snake skin was edible, but it does seem to make sense. It smelled perfectly normal. I felt no hesitation in tucking in.



The bits of snake were fairly long, and some required sucking in, like a thick piece of pasta.



I hate to be finally saying this, but it really did taste like chicken. The texture was fairly similar too, though perhaps a little more chewy and gristly. Not like a particularly tasty chicken either. The skin was even like a roast chicken's. There was a little chewing involved, but otherwise there was no difficulty in finishing off the bowl.



Apparently snake is the most healthy meat of all, containing only omega-3 oils. This fact is perhaps some consolation for paying 25 yuen for a small bowl of not particularly interesting soup.
At this point the tables were being packed up and we were being bothered by a prostitute, so we paid up, made our excuses and left.




(9 comments) - (Post a new comment)


[info]vkacademy
2007-02-19 11:08 pm UTC (link)
Do you have a clue as to what type of snake it was?

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[info]foodtube
2007-02-20 07:56 am UTC (link)
Not sure at all.

(Reply to this) (Parent)(Thread)


[info]vkacademy
2007-02-21 10:16 pm UTC (link)
Hmm. I've got another question for you. Actually, I asked in on my LJ but your answer should be really good:

Say you are visiting a primitive tribe. You are their special guest
of honor, and at your feast they serve the deliciously cooked flesh of
an executed criminal. Now, this guy was killed humanely (beheaded) and
would have been executed regardless of your visit. There are no organs
served, just the meat. Assuming that you would in no way be dishonored for refusing, would you eat man-meat in this situation? (Assume there's no disease or anything in the flesh.)

(Reply to this) (Parent)(Thread)


[info]foodtube
2007-02-22 02:20 pm UTC (link)
I wouldn't. Not because it's a human - as such - but because he was executed. If they are killing people and serving them up as food I'm not sitting down to eat with them at all, let alone joining in.
I don't think there's any such thing as humane execution, by the way.

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(Reply from suspended user)

[info]otana
2007-02-20 11:01 am UTC (link)
I've always been curious about trying snake.

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[info]saciel
2007-02-20 01:33 pm UTC (link)
Remembers me my grandpa was eating snakes mostly during world war II (he was going from north africa to central asia, everything to avoid going back to Germany) and sometimes even when I was little he catched a snake and fried it.
I regret never tasting it :( it smelled quite well but that time I feared for snakes and nowadays I like them too much to eat them.

(Reply to this)

Glad to see an update here
(Anonymous)
2007-03-11 09:17 am UTC (link)
Its a shame it was, as you say, an uninteresting soup!

A quick note to say good work on this journal, Ive been following it for a while now and it is the only weblog I read regularly. A couple of years ago I stopped being a vegetarian after 11 years, and suddenly discovered I like oriental food, and now eat very little western food. Like you, I want to try as many flavours of meat, and indeed as alien flavours as possible, as I can (but for a different reason). I find your sometimes courageous and often rewarding experimentation with food a great inspiration.

Keep up the good work!

(Reply to this)

Your reviews
(Anonymous)
2007-05-17 02:08 pm UTC (link)
I have been following your progress with great interest- there are a number of those things that I don't think I could stomach. Is there anything in particular that you want to try which you haven't been able to get hold of yet? I'm thinking of the likes of sea cucumber or pig intestine that I see for sale in some of the more interesting restaurants in Soho. (I have tried pork tripe stew and that wasn't too bad at all, though that was in Eastern Europe.) I quite envy the opportunity to try a lot of these things and to experience a different culture for a reasonable period. I'm sure that there must be many more interesting installments to come and I look forward to them.

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