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DARE TO ASK: No cats — on or off the menu

By PHILLIP MILANO

Question

To Chinese people or people who work in Chinese restaurants: Do you kill cats, cook them and sell them to your customers, stating that it is chicken?

Elizabeth S., 23, mixed race, Philadelphia

Replies

Cat (or dog) meat does not taste like chicken. Cats and dogs are inefficient sources of protein. They are much more expensive than pork or chicken. In China, they are served on special occasions, and not everyone can afford them or has a preference for them. They are not served in North America as chicken because of the cost. Chinese living in America also understand the taboo against eating cat or dog meat in this culture.

Leonard, 45, Asian, Tampa

There are animals that are raised for food, and then there are pets. One should not eat pets.

Katherine, 22, Asian, Toronto

My wife is Filipina, and I’ve visited that country with her many times. She tells me that only the very poor and desperate eat dog meat, much like some poorer people in this country used to eat horse meat.

A.C.C., male, West Lafayette, Ind.

Icelandic people eat putrefied shark meat and pickled ram testicles. Thais are rumored to eat cockroaches. Northern Chinese enjoy turtle soup. Kenyans eat monkey brains. Koreans used to eat dog, although the younger generation, having adopted Western values, considers it low-class and barbaric. Anyway, the list goes on and on. Not just Asians eat funky stuff. White people and black people around the world do, too.

Jake, 20, Korean-American, Los Angeles

Expert says

Tongue got your cat?

Actually, there’s no need to fear that your fave feline will wind up in a takeout box as Egg Foo Fluffy.

This tale has been wending its way across the urban legend landscape for more than 100 years, much of it due to a good old-fashioned fear of foreigners, says Gail de Vos, a University of Alberta professor and author of Tales, Rumors, and Gossip: Exploring Contemporary Folk Literature (Libraries Unlimited).

“Look at a cat. How much meat is there?” she said. “I’m not sure why there is this rumor about Chinese restaurants. Maybe it’s because meat [in Chinese cuisine] is cut so finely … in tiny chunks.”

The stereotype sometimes pops up when there are news reports of a local Chinese restaurant closing.

“It’s a racist reaction. Because [Chinese restaurant owners] are different, we can tend to distrust what they are giving us. And today we are more insular than we used to be. Despite the Web and TV, we are still terrified of things that are different.”

It is true that dogs and cats don’t enjoy exalted-pet status in all countries. And while cats are eaten in some far-flung areas of China and dog meat is served in Korea, these practices are waning, de Vos added. They certainly aren’t followed in North America or Europe among Asians or Asian-Americans, she stressed.

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