globetrotter wrote:I don't see these items for sale in my town. Protein is Goat, Beef, Eggs, Chicken, Duck, Dofu and Pork. Lots of noodles, no insects or scorpions or such.
Are those dishes real or fiction? Are the Travel Channl foodie shows just make believe or what?
"Exotic meats" like "Little Tigers" (meow meow) is popular in southern areas like Guangdong, but not a "northern" dish.
If you go to tourist areas in Beijing, like Wangfujing, you'd find a eatery street with many stalls, selling fried scorpions and various critters. I was there in 2007 and saw it in person. But it's not a common treat like chicken feet that you can find in most dim sum places.
http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/china/2010 ... 379689.htm
China to jail people for up to 15 days who eat dog
By Zhao Chunzhe (chinadaily.com.cn)
Updated: 2010-01-26 15:36
China has launched its first draft proposal to protect the country's animals from maltreatment including a measure to jail people who eat dog for up to 15 days, the Chongqing Evening News reported today.
The pilot scheme aims to protect the nation's animal from misuse or injury and defines maltreatment as hurting or killing animals in a cruel manner.
The draft has nine chapters covering major regulations including animal medical treatment, transportation and butchers regulations.
It also proposes that people caught eating dog or cat meat will be detained for no more than 15 days with a fine of 5,000 yuan ($732). Any unit or group found violating the rule will be fined between 10,000 yuan ($1,464) to 500,000 yuan ($73,239).
"It won't impact people's lives because only few people eat the meat of dogs and cats," said Chang Jiwen, a principal drafter.
China National Native Produce & Animal By-Products Import & Export Corporation backed the act saying it will encourage its trade volume of down and cashmere, the report said.