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Snake
wine (rưá"£u
rắn in Vietnamese) is
an alcoholic beverage that includes a whole venomous snake in the
bottle. It originated in
Vietnam and can be found around
Southeast Asia . The snakes,
preferably venomous ones, are usually not preserved for their meat.
They are preserved to have the snake poison dissolved in the liquor.
However, because snake venom is protein-based, they are unfolded and
therefore inactivated due to the influence of the denaturing effects
of ethanol.
A
large venomous snake can be placed into a glass jar of rice wine,
often with many smaller snakes, turtles, insects, or birds, and left
to steep for many months. The wine is drunk as a restorative in
small shots or cups
Body
fluids of snake are mixed into wine and consumed immediately in the
form of a shot. Snake blood wine is prepared by slicing a snake
along its belly and draining its blood into a mixing vat with rice
wine or grain alcohol. Snake bile wine is done through a similar
method by using the contents of the gall bladder. Snake meat, liver,
and skin can be prepared to accompany the
drinks |