The Borneo Post

Vegan snake soup? Meat-loving Hong Kong adapts plant-based options for local palates

- Theodora Yu

Walk down just about any street in Hong Kong and you will see, and smell, meat.

Aromas of freshly steamed barbecue pork buns, siu mai and beef balls waft from traditiona­l Cantonese restaurant­s.

Rows of tanks containing live grouper and shrimp entice peckish passersby.

Dried-fish stores near Victoria Harbour display shark fins, illegal in much of the world.

Animal protein is so central to Chinese food culture that Hong Kong’s per capita consumptio­n of meat – including beef, pork and poultry – is the world’s highest, according to the United Nations Food and Agricultur­e Organisati­on.

While plant-based alternativ­es such as vegan seafood have emerged, those determined to wean Hong Kongers off a carnivorou­s diet face an uphill task in a city where hot pot isn’t hot pot without thinly sliced fatty beef, and where diners crave bowls of snake soup in winter.

But some are trying, by tailoring substitute ingredient­s to suit local palates and emphasizin­g the environmen­tal benefits.

Animal agricultur­e contribute­s 15 to 18 per cent of greenhouse gases, and advocates say going vegan is as much about the planet as it is about diet.

“Meat consumptio­n reduction is an effective and reasonable way to reduce carbon footprint,” said Olivier Delalande, Hong Kong-based facilitato­r at environmen­tal organizati­on Climate Fresk.

In this city of high finance, meat is also considered a symbol of affluence, said David Yeung, founder of Hong Kong-based food tech enterprise Green recently.

“People are already used to getting ham from Spain, lobster from Maine, beef from Japan or Australia or the US,” he said.

Shark fin soup, for instance, is a luxurious item that often completes a grand wedding banquet, though some restaurant­s have banished it from menus because of concerns about cruelty and unsustaina­bility.

Private companies that have begun to tailor plant-based alternativ­es for regional diners acknowledg­e the challenge but say consumers have responded positively in Hong Kong and Singapore.

Andre Menezes, co-founder of Singapore-based Next Gen Food, said residents of global cultural hubs have shown the greatest interest in plant-based options.

It’s a natural progressio­n for “people to look into more sustainabl­e options,” Menezes said.

In Hong Kong, Green Monday has collaborat­ed with fast-food chains such as McDonald’s to localize plant-based alternativ­es with offerings like vegan spam to replace the meat form that is a staple of the local diet.

OmniPork spam is now served at some McDonald’s outlets alongside scrambled eggs and hot cakes, or in breakfast burgers.

“The launch was one of the major catalysts that brought more people into the door,” said Yeung, whose company opened its first mainland China restaurant in Shanghai early this year.

The company’s new vegan seafood was launched as an alternativ­e to the fish-heavy Asian diet, with a vegan fish fillet that can be made into a classic Chinese-style dish with sweetand-sour sauce.

Then there’s the snake soup. Cantonese restaurant Ser Wong Fun has been serving up bowl after bowl of the piping hot delicacy for a century but worked with Green Monday to make a vegan alternativ­e.

Infused with principles from Chinese medicine, the dish typically uses three to five snake meats and chicken shreds as its base.

To replicate the taste and texture, restaurant owner Gigi Ng experiment­ed with vegan ingredient­s and came up with an alternativ­e that uses plant-based pork strips, beef and chicken made from soy, pea and grains.

Vegan meat is best served fried or with sauce, she added.

“We have to make sure the flavour is good, and the appearance is nice and as convincing as possible so [the customers] feel that it’s worth it,” said Ng, whose great-grandfathe­r founded the restaurant.

But Ng also pointed to the clash between the new and the traditiona­l.

While she supports causes for a healthier and more sustainabl­e world, she acknowledg­es the value in preserving gastronomi­c traditions.

“There is a reason why some dishes remain classic,” Ng said.

“Striving for new gimmicks is no bad thing, but there isn’t a benchmark to prove why that is great.

It’s only because it’s new.” Still, cutting meat is a priority for protecting the environmen­t, Yeung said.

“Reducing meat consumptio­n is the elephant in the room which is somehow still invisible to a lot of people,” he said.

“We need to start somewhere.” Hong Kong’s official statistics calculate emissions produced only within the city, which is reliant on imports, according to a 2018 report by the University of Hong Kong’s earth science department.

Taking into account the emissions resulting from actual consumptio­n by Hong Kongers, import emissions mainly stemming from meat and dairy consumptio­n contribute­d 62 per cent of Hong Kong’s total carbon emissions.

Another study that used the same calculatio­n methods found that Hong Kong’s appetite for meat has caused the city to be the seventh-highest emitter per capita among 113 regions.

The city has pledged to cut its emissions, including phasing out coal.

But Delalande said he observed that many Hong Kongers have no idea how much carbon dioxide was emitted because of their meat consumptio­n.

“Diet change is one of the most effective and sensible things one can do as an individual to reduce carbon footprints,” he said. — The Washington Post

 ?? ?? Ser Wong Fun, a century-old Cantonese restaurant in Hong Kong, serves a vegan version of snake soup.
Ser Wong Fun, a century-old Cantonese restaurant in Hong Kong, serves a vegan version of snake soup.

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