A bit of humour

Possibly not. We have seen dog on the menu in China. Back in our early visits from 1981 on it was not uncommon. there were some other things we declined to eat. One dish in Xian had no translation but when we asked were told it was mouse..
Those things are becoming much less common. there is a yearly dog festival which is steadily declining in popularity.
Appreciate it's a local "delicacy" in some parts of the world, but surely not on an international flight....?
 
Appreciate it's a local "delicacy" in some parts of the world, but surely not on an international flight....?

@drron
Possibly not. We have seen dog on the menu in China. Back in our early visits from 1981 on it was not uncommon.”


The menu item, however, was not dog, but imported dog food. Completely different.
 
Possibly not. We have seen dog on the menu in China. Back in our early visits from 1981 on it was not uncommon. there were some other things we declined to eat. One dish in Xian had no translation but when we asked were told it was mouse..
Those things are becoming much less common. there is a yearly dog festival which is steadily declining in popularity.

Appreciate it's a local "delicacy" in some parts of the world, but surely not on an international flight....?

@drron
Possibly not. We have seen dog on the menu in China. Back in our early visits from 1981 on it was not uncommon.”


The menu item, however, was not dog, but imported dog food. Completely different.

If you are travelling around Vietnam, hidden but in plain sight as you walk around. Restaurants that smell amazing as you walk past with an extensive menu but a large sign outside saying "thịt cay" - every dish is likely dog meat but prepared in different ways.

Not so common in Korea nowadays but used to be restaurants with puppies in a cage - pick one and the chef would prepare a dish for you (similar to fish in a tank in a Chinese restaurant)
 
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