Viet Nam News
Minh Thu
Vietnamese cuisine is one of the country’s biggest tourist attractions, but there are some dishes you need a bit of courage to eat, like snake meat.
If you can overcome your fear of the animal, there are a wide variety of delicacies to enjoy. With one snake, a chef is capable of creating more than 10 dishes.
Located in Long Bien District, 10km from Ha Noi City centre, Le Mat Village is well-known nationwide for its snake farms and restaurants, which use only domestic snakes, not wild ones.
The most popular species are grass snakes and rat snakes, which don’t have venom that can harm humans.
Truong Khac Lap, owner of Ran Rao Restaurant, said he inherited the trade of raising snakes from his father.
“People may feel scared but actually snake meat is quite similar to eel meat in taste and texture,” Lap said.
“Snake meat is very good for health, supporting immune functions and bone health. It’s safe for everyone including women and children. People may have an allergy when they consume seafood. There is no risk for snake.”
Lap said snakes are fed with frogs and mice and consume no antibiotics or chemicals like pork and beef do.
Herbalist To An Tra agreed. “Snake meat is light pink in colour and salty. Some medical books indicated that it is a ‘warming’ food, which heats up the body,” he said.
“Scientists nowadays have also pointed out that snake meat contains vitamins, folic acid, saponin, taurine and lysine, which are good for health.
“Snake meat has a number of medicinal benefits, including inflammation, blood nourishment, easing pain and improvement of skin quality.”
Snake delicacies
Restaurants in Le Mat Village have menus with abundant dishes including snake meat wrapped and grilled in la lot (betel leaves), crispy snake skin, snake spring rolls, fried snake bones with rice crackers, sauteed snake meat and sauteed snake entrails.
The feast can’t be complete without snake egg porridge, sticky rice steamed with snake grease, snake broth with ginger and snake hotpot.
Each dish brings an interesting experience for gourmands, with an inviting scent.
The restaurants in Le Mat are decorated with glass jars containing snake wine and adventurous diners can taste rice wine mixed with the blood, bile and heart of the snake, or wine with whole snakes infused inside for a long time.
Lap said the village receives more and more people come to visit snake farms and enjoy a snake feast.
“We have been raising snakes for generations and we are used to being bitten,” said Lap.
“Raising snakes is not easy but requires special techniques. We use tools to feed snakes to avoid being bitten.
“We always keep the cage clean and airy, otherwise the snakes can get ill. Ill snakes look slow, pale and thin. They eat very little. We remove the ill ones to prevent infection.”
The snake meat is sold at VND800,000/kg (US$40) for raw meat and VND1.2 million/kg ($60) for cooked meat. A set menu for two people costs VND600,000 including drinks. Lap suggested visiting in a big group to enjoy all the dishes. — VNS