Mouthfuls: Too hot for dog on the menu - Mouthfuls

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Too hot for dog on the menu Fuchsia Dunlop writes of Beijing's tidying up

#1 User is offline   Rail Paul 

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Posted 04 August 2008 - 07:33 PM



QUOTE
THOSE who hope to taste dog meat when they visit Beijing for this summer’s Olympics may be disappointed. The Beijing Catering Trade Association has ordered all 112 designated Olympic restaurants to take dog off the menu, and has strongly advised other establishments to stop serving it until September. Waiters have been urged to “patiently” suggest alternative dishes to customers who ask for dog. It’s all part of a wider campaign to avoid offending foreigners during the Games. (Beijingers have also been told to line up nicely, to stop spitting and even to avoid asking tourists questions about their ages, salaries and love lives.)

The order is not likely to bother many residents. Though dogs have been raised for food in China for thousands of years, you have to hunt around to find the meat on modern menus. Certain regions, like Hunan and Guizhou Provinces, are known for their canine predilections — but even in these places, dog is a relative rarity. And in Beijing itself, you hardly find it except in a few Korean and regional Chinese restaurants.

Dog eating, in any case, tends to be a seasonal pursuit. According to Chinese folk dietetics, which classify every food according to its heating and cooling properties, dog is one of the “hottest” meats around, best eaten in midwinter, when you need warmth and vital energy, not in sultry August.



Back in September, though
My only complaint was that if they need to charge me $30 because they're robbing the duck to pay the boar they might as well give me a more substantial portion of flour, water, and bits of meat.

Orik, on the pasta price at Hearth in NYC
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#2 User is offline   Daniel 

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Posted 04 August 2008 - 08:26 PM

Driving along the country roads was eye opening. I remember seeing a greyhound bus where they were taking dogs and throwing them into the luggage trunk.. I have been to several restaurant where dog and cat were on the menu.

The dish of this town we go to is called Dragon fights Tiger.. And as it was explained to me, it was a spicy dish of snake and cat..

I think there will be lots of shocking things when tourists go to the Olympics..


Ason, I keep planets in orbit.
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#3 User is offline   pim 

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Posted 04 August 2008 - 11:19 PM

I thought the point of that article was this..

QUOTE
That eating dog is seen as an issue says more about Western preoccupations than Chinese habits. Since time immemorial, Westerners have had a morbid fascination with the weird fringes of the Chinese diet. Marco Polo noted with distaste that the Chinese liked eating snake and dog; modern Western journalists just love to get their teeth into a juicy story about some revolting delicacy like the assorted animal penises served at the Guolizhuang restaurant in Beijing. And for gung-ho foreign tourists, a skewerful of deep-fried scorpions in the night market in central Beijing has become a rite of passage.

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#4 User is online   Orik 

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Posted 07 August 2008 - 08:54 PM

Curiously, I've found that Korean business associates are *convinced* that westerners don't eat octopus. They think that's somehow related to biblical edicts. huh.gif
I think that is the danger of keeping a blog: you exaggerate everything
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