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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Description  





2 Controversy  





3 See also  





4 References  














Snake bite chicken







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This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this articlebyadding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "Snake bite chicken" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR
(September 2015) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

Snake bite chicken

Traditional Chinese

蛇咬雞

Simplified Chinese

蛇咬鸡

Transcriptions

Standard Mandarin

Hanyu Pinyin

shé yǎo jī

Yue: Cantonese

Jyutping

se4 ngaau5 gai1

Snake bite chicken is a controversial dish served in Guangdong and Chongqing China, though its exact origin is unknown. The dish consist of a venomous snake being forced to bite a chicken. After the chicken is envenomated and dies, it is then served.

Description[edit]

The foshan dish cooking method is made by forcing a venomous snake to bite a chicken. The chicken is bitten and poisoned through the head.[1][permanent dead link] It may take more than 10 minutes for the chicken to die. A strong chicken may require several bites.[1][permanent dead link] After the chicken dies, it can be served in a pan for 98 Chinese yuan. If it is served with both the chicken and the snake, it costs 118 yuan.[1][permanent dead link]

Controversy[edit]

This section may be confusing or unclear to readers. Please help clarify the section. There might be a discussion about this on the talk page. (September 2015) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

A controversial video was made from a Guangdong restaurant.[1][permanent dead link] It was then broadcast and generated a large number of anti-Cantonese comments.[2] When a reporter asked a notable professor from Sun Yat-sen University about the health benefit of the dish, he claimed that it was only his first time of hearing about the dish.[1] Health authorities in Guangdong have already told restaurants to stop serving the dish. Chongqing have also joined in.[3]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e 163.com. "163.com." 网友曝毒蛇咬鸡成广州餐馆招牌菜. Retrieved on 2009-06-07.
  • ^ Sina.com. "Sina.com." 最血腥菜肴视频“毒蛇咬鸡”. Retrieved on 2009-06-07.
  • ^ Shanghaidaily.com. "Shanghaidaily.com." Snakebite dish banned. Retrieved on 2009-06-17.
  • Main dishes

  • Bird's nest soup
  • Buddha's delight
  • Cantonese seafood soup
  • Chinese steamed eggs
  • Congee
  • Crispy fried chicken
  • Dragon tiger phoenix
  • Egg foo young
  • Eight treasure duck
  • Hot pot
  • Lemon chicken
  • Pork knuckles and ginger stew
  • Seafood birdsnest
  • Shark fin soup
  • Snake bite chicken
  • Soy sauce chicken
  • Steam minced pork
  • Subgum
  • Suckling pig
  • Sweet and sour pork
  • White boiled shrimp
  • White cut chicken
  • Wonton noodles
  • Yangzhou fried rice
  • Dim sum and yum cha

  • Beef tripe
  • Cha siu bao
  • Chicken feet
  • Coconut bar
  • Har gow
  • Jian dui
  • Jiaozi
  • Lo mai gai
  • Nian gao
  • Ox-tongue pastry
  • Rice noodle roll
  • Shumai
  • Spring roll
  • Steamed meatball
  • Swiss wing
  • Taro cake
  • Taro dumpling
  • Tendon
  • Tofu skin roll
  • Turnip cake
  • Water chestnut cake
  • Yau gok
  • Youtiao
  • Zhaliang
  • Siu laap

  • Chinese sausage
  • Lou mei
  • Orange cuttlefish
  • Roast goose
  • Siu mei
  • Siu yuk
  • White cut chicken
  • Desserts and pastry

  • Biscuit roll
  • Deuk Deuk Tong
  • Douhua
  • Ginger milk curd
  • Lo mai chi
  • Malay sponge cake
  • Mooncake
  • Red bean cake
  • Red bean soup
  • Sausage bun
  • Tang bu shuai
  • Tong sui
  • White sugar sponge cake
  • Condiments and spices

  • Five-spice powder
  • XO sauce
  • Ingredients

  • Black bean paste
  • Chenpi
  • Conpoy
  • Fermented black beans
  • Fish ball
  • Fishcake
  • Frog legs
  • Garland chrysanthemum
  • Kai-lan
  • Mantis shrimp
  • Ong choy
  • Pig blood curd
  • Pig's ear
  • Rapeseed
  • Saang mein
  • Sea cucumbers
  • Shahe fen
  • Shrimp roe noodles
  • Spare ribs
  • Suan cai
  • Tofu skin
  • Wonton
  • Yi mein
  • Youmian
  • Zha cai
  • Others

  • Dried shredded squid
  • Lou fo tong
  • Beijing cuisine
  • Shanghai cuisine
  • Hong Kong cuisine
  • Macanese cuisine
  • Chinese cuisine
  • History of Chinese cuisine

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Snake_bite_chicken&oldid=1207655632"

    Categories: 
    Cantonese cuisine
    Chinese chicken dishes
    Snake products
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