Long Reads
Wet Markets Are Essential to Thai Cooking. So Why Are They Disappearing?
On the long tradition of these vibrant cultural pillars, and COVID-19's threat on their existence.
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10 Comments
Rudica A.
September 21, 2020
Dog meat, cat meat exotic rare animals abused and in filthy cages. Many beaten, some boiled or skinned alive. Any ae some one's pet that has been stolen. They need to be shut down. There are videos that shows these things. My ancestors are from Asia and I can tell you first hand many of the foods that were cooked where terrible. Growing up in SF Chinatown I remember the most horrible smells coming from the open street markets. Really disgusting!
TLS
September 21, 2020
The comments here are clearly from very ignorant people who have never set foot in Asia. A wet market has nothing to do with wild animals outside of China. Most wet markets don't slaughter animals on site, with the exception of chickens, as that's what Asians consider is fresh chicken. Keep in mind that there are still millions of people in this part of the world that don't own refrigerators, so if they don't buy it and go home and cook it straight away, the food will spoil.
Just because you live in a part of the world where things are done differently, doesn't mean people are wrong in other parts of the world. There are lots of wet and dry markets where I live and there are fewer salmonella outbreaks here than in the "clean" US, in fact, the few food recalls I've seen here have been imported US produce.
In over a decade of living and traveling around Asia I have never gotten seriously ill from eating the local food. I eat where the locals eat, although I'm obviously not going to eat in a really nasty looking place, but I have no problems with holes in a wall or street food.
In fact, I much rather eat mystery meat in Vietnam than the over proceed, mass produced gunk that is sold as food in the US.
Ignorance is bliss they say, but that's clearly a lie, as in case people want to abolish something they don't know the first thing about. Long live the Asian markets.
Just because you live in a part of the world where things are done differently, doesn't mean people are wrong in other parts of the world. There are lots of wet and dry markets where I live and there are fewer salmonella outbreaks here than in the "clean" US, in fact, the few food recalls I've seen here have been imported US produce.
In over a decade of living and traveling around Asia I have never gotten seriously ill from eating the local food. I eat where the locals eat, although I'm obviously not going to eat in a really nasty looking place, but I have no problems with holes in a wall or street food.
In fact, I much rather eat mystery meat in Vietnam than the over proceed, mass produced gunk that is sold as food in the US.
Ignorance is bliss they say, but that's clearly a lie, as in case people want to abolish something they don't know the first thing about. Long live the Asian markets.
[email protected]
September 21, 2020
There is no need for name calling in the comments section please -- people should be allowed to make their statements without you insulting them and calling them ignorant. No one is talking about abolishing anything. Please read the comments carefully before you go off on a rant. If you want your comments to be respected, then please respect others comments too.
TLS
September 22, 2020
I guess you're the one that needs to read them carefully, as that's exactly what people are calling for. Just because China does something, didn't mean the rest of Asia is like that. No-one commenting here seems to have any first hand experience of wet markets, so all the comments here are pointless scare mongering that means nothing. And yes, it's ignorant people posting the comments, since if you haven't been to a wet market, you really have no clue what it is. Some of us actually live in these parts of the world and do our shopping in wet markets and I have never once seen any of the things that people are claiming here in the comments.
[email protected]
September 22, 2020
Again - you've failed to grasp my message about your ability to be respectful without name calling -- you are entitled to your opinion as is everyone else, but it is just that -- your opinion, it is not truth. This is the part where I be gracious and just stop.
TLS
September 22, 2020
Obviously it's more than my opinion, it's my every day life. If you're going to go around criticising a part of the world you've never visited, just because of something you saw on TV or read on the internet, then you're ignorant. The world isn't America and just because things are done a certain way where you live, doesn't mean it's right. If you're that narrow minded, I feel sorry for you.
Sephi C.
September 21, 2020
https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2020/08/31/did-pangolins-start-the-coronavirus-pandemic
Vicki C.
September 20, 2020
Representing "wet markets" as alternately culturally invaluable and generally nothing more than a place to buy the occasional chicken or a fish is simply dishonest - at least for the purposes of such an article. If nothing else, there has been too much research already on SARS to not know better than that. Also, they are, in every instance that I've seen videos of, not just potentially strikingly unhealthy or unsanitary but morally abominable as well (which of course is the case on all counts with industrial meat production as well). Hardly everyone needs to murder (or live cook) a kidnapped and caged, terrified animal to be a great cook, or feels much inspiration to do so - and no amount of beautifully colored mounds of fresh spices, fruits or vegetables can make it otherwise. Given the gaping hole in the middle of this article, and the ever so inept attempt to fill it with manipulative, politically correct charges of cultural and racial attacks if anyone might have a problem with the flagrant moral ignorance found at such places, it must be noted that a great, great many people would hardly be able to stay numb to or otherwise blatantly ignore the moral ramifications of such "inspirational" places where live animals are left to patiently await their clearly pending demise among the inexplicable indifference and chaos of the human animal world, not because we can't feed ourselves quite well without such callous disregard for others, but simply because we'd prefer to do otherwise.
constancewilliams
September 20, 2020
There is a social experiential element to shopping at a farmers market, which the writer clearly was trying to convey, and as a foodie, I appreciate his story.
On a smaller scale, wet markets are our small farmer markets in the US, though live animals are not traded. We have many recalls of big-Agri industrial farmed vegetables and fruits that include meat in the industrial food chain. Yes, we live in a global economy, and transmission of any virus has many ways to hitch a ride. We can't eliminate the flu virus, so what makes us think we can prevent any other virus. We could trace Covid19 to the Wuhan market, but like all prior Covids, it can mutate anytime, anywhere, and any species. We know one way to diminish the transmission of any virus simply, and that is if everyone gets on board with wearing a mask, washing hands, and social distancing until a vaccine helps reduce the death rate.
On a smaller scale, wet markets are our small farmer markets in the US, though live animals are not traded. We have many recalls of big-Agri industrial farmed vegetables and fruits that include meat in the industrial food chain. Yes, we live in a global economy, and transmission of any virus has many ways to hitch a ride. We can't eliminate the flu virus, so what makes us think we can prevent any other virus. We could trace Covid19 to the Wuhan market, but like all prior Covids, it can mutate anytime, anywhere, and any species. We know one way to diminish the transmission of any virus simply, and that is if everyone gets on board with wearing a mask, washing hands, and social distancing until a vaccine helps reduce the death rate.
[email protected]
September 17, 2020
I can appreciate what the author is saying about the cultural vibrancy and micro economies created by "wet" markets and what the impact would be if they were all shut down, but perhaps some conversation around what is being sold (fruits and veg vs. live animals) could be had. Clearly something went very wrong in Wuhan and the results are being felt around the world -- did we learn nothing about SARS? We need to balance the grassroots with health and safety and to ignore that aspect of wet markets, well, we are all living with the results of that action!
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