Empowered … Snake
shop owner Mak Tai-kong believes snake blood and meat gives strength to those
who drink it. – Reuterspic
HONG KONG: When a
king cobra lunges at Chau Ka-ling as the door to its wooden cage falls open in
her busy Hong Kong restaurant, she just laughs, then pulls it gently into her
arms.
For Chau is a
‘‘snake king”,’ one of scores in Hong Kong who have through generations tamed
snakes to make soup out of them, a traditional cuisine believed to be good for
the health.
Healthy bowl of snake soup |
Yet the people
behind providing fresh snakes for the savoury meal thought to speed up the
body’s blood flow and keep it strong in the cold winter months may be doomed,
with young people increasingly reluctant to take on a job they see as hard and
dirty.
‘‘He is my boss,
he supports my living,’’ said Chau of the snake she cradled at Shia Wong Hip, a
popular shop that serves over 1,000 bowls of hot snake soup on the busiest
winter days.
Trained by her
father in childhood to handle snakes, Chau, now in her early 50s, took over the
business he founded, serving up a small bowl of soup for HK$35 (NZ$5).
From boiling the
essence out of snake, chicken and pig bones, to spicing it up with an array of
ingredients that include five types of snake meat, the traditional southern
Chinese snack can take more than six hours to make.
Yet as the cold
deepens in the weeks leading up to the Chinese New Year and the Year of the Snake
it ushers in on February 10, Hong Kong locals huddle inside small street shops
like hers.
The thick soup is
flavoured with hints of lemongrass, while the snake itself tastes like chicken,
but is tougher.
‘‘Snake soup can
help you stay healthy, and when the weather is cold it helps keep you from
catching the flu,’’ said customer Stephen Lau.
While soup stalls
remain popular, scattered across the former British colony, retail snake shops
have diminished to a slithery few, such as the 110-year-old She Wong Lam.
Inside, more than
100 snakes lie quietly in wooden cupboards labeled ‘‘poisonous snakes’’ as the
clicks of an abacus echo through the dimly lit shop.
Shop owner Mak
Tai-kong, 84, has been working there for 64 years. He sells an average of 100 snakes
a week to restaurants and snake soup shops that could otherwise buy
pre-butchered meat, but prefer the freshness he offers.
Over the decades,
he has trained about 20 people to become snake handlers — and said he has a few
tried and true tips to help people put aside their fear of the venomous
creatures, including starting them out on snakes whose fangs have been pulled
and thus are no longer dangerous.
‘‘Then, after he
has been bitten a couple times by a snake that is no longer poisonous, he will
think, ‘Oh, this is not painful, this is nothing, this is like being bitten by
an ant,’’’ Mak said.
‘‘Then he will no
longer be scared, and as he works more he will get more used to it.’’
But new blood is
hard to find. The youngest employee in the shop has now been there more than 30
years.
‘‘There won’t be
many. Firstly, it’s crummy and dirty, and snakes smell,’’ Mak said.
‘‘Secondly, the
wages aren’t high. So not many people enter the field.’’
Mak feels his job
is less about making money and more about providing a service to society by
keeping a tradition alive.
Yet even fellow
‘‘snake king’’ Chau said she had no successors trained, and in fact has refused
to do so.
‘‘I’ve killed
snakes for so many year, but actually I don’t want to. Because there are fewer
and fewer snakes now,’’ she said.
‘‘But I can’t
make a career change. There’s nothing else I can do.’’ - Reuters
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