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The price of Rat meat goes up in Thailand
Living Thai ^ | Not Specified | Editorial staff

Posted on 08/17/2017 5:06:28 AM PDT by vannrox

The price of Rat meat goes up in Thailand

I rarely copy a news story but a story about eating rats I can't pass up. This story from PDN about the price of rat meat in Phitsanulok. Before you think that's it's only poor farmers eating rats, the cost of rat meat is double that of chicken and pork. This lady says it costs 250 baht a kilogram for a big rodent, not that i'm noting to buy a whole kilo of it! Still I've eaten rat meat and although I prefer fried frog, fried rat isn't too bad either. Have you tried it?

Fried Rats in Thailand

On a winter’s day, a reporter driving in Phitsanulok province noticed a big poster on the side of the road, which said “Grilled Rats.” The sign was on the roadside along the route going from Sukhothai to Pitsanulok in Tambon Phaikhordorn, about 10 km from Phitsanulok.

The reporter stopped and talked to the rat-selling owner, Mrs. Somboon Yuyen, age 50, who lives on Tharmmul road, Amphur Meuang, Chainart province.

She said that selling grilled rats is a business that provides revenues to many families in the area. In winter, many local people like to eat grilled rats and come to buy her rats. Sometimes there are so many customers, she runs out of grilled rats to sell.

Mrs. Somboon has been selling grilled field rats for about 7 years. In the decade before that, she used to mainly catch the field rats to sell to the grilled rat shops. Back then the price would be 30 THB per kg. Her revenue would total only 200 THB per day.

Then the wholesale rat prices increased to 80-100 THB per kg. However, the grilled rats had a higher price of 150 THB per kg. So Ms. Somboon and her husband began to catch the field rats to grill and sell themselves.

The rat-grilling business was going well, with a steadily increasing number of consumers. So Mrs. Somboon began to go to other provinces to buy more field rats in the lower northern and central Thailand areas.

She bought field rats from rice field owners that fetched high prices according to the demands of the sellers. Prices would average 100 THB per kg of rats, but sometimes reached 150 THB per kg. Mrs. Somboon would freeze the rats and store them, to be grilled later for hungry customers.

Mrs. Somboon said there seems to be more demand for grilled rats than in the past. So she has been traveling around and selling her rats in many lower north provinces, including Chainart province, Pijit province and Pitsanulok province. Business has been good in Phitsanulok, where she has been selling rats for five months, so she has no immediate plans to move.

The prices for her rats vary according to size. For the small size rats, the price is 200 THB per kg; the medium size rats sell for 220 THB per kg; and big rats sell for 250 THB per kg.

Although she considers the prices of rats to be expensive, the people who like to eat rats consider it a cheap price to pay. For people who want to grill their rats at home, her frozen field rats are priced at 180 THB per kg.

Some customers buy 3-5 kg of frozen rats each time to store in their refrigerators, and also buy rats for their relatives and friends. Most of her customers are local people, and some are drivers passing by who notice her shop.

Selling grilled field rats is an occupation that Mrs. Somboon is proud of, and can generate revenues up to 1 million THB a year. Mrs. Somboon averages more than 2,000-3,000 THB daily in sales. During the festivals, she can earn more than 10,000 THB daily.

Mrs. Somboon now enjoys a better financial status because of her business. She bought a pickup truck to buy more rats in many places, and can now build her own house from the money she made selling rats.



TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: asia; business; food; foodsupply; meat; rat; rodents
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To: vannrox

Mrs. Somboon has been selling grilled field rats for about 7 years.

...

Free Range. How long before Whole Foods sells them.


21 posted on 08/17/2017 5:53:53 AM PDT by Moonman62 (Make America Great Again!)
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To: vannrox

Rat. The other, other white meat.


22 posted on 08/17/2017 5:57:03 AM PDT by Flick Lives (#CNNblackmail)
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To: vannrox
Darn. You know what they say, "When the price of Thai rat meat sneezes, chicken McNuggets catches a cold".
 
23 posted on 08/17/2017 6:33:13 AM PDT by Governor Dinwiddie
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To: Mr Ramsbotham

Then there are those who don’t give them away.


24 posted on 08/17/2017 6:38:06 AM PDT by going hot (Happiness is a Momma Deuce)
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To: Gay State Conservative
Visited Thailand once...stayed three or four days.All I can say is “yikes!”

Everyone I know who has been to Thailand loved it. What was your experience?

25 posted on 08/17/2017 6:51:04 AM PDT by null and void (You can only see into the future as far as you can see into your past.)
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To: vannrox

Rat tart!


26 posted on 08/17/2017 6:54:50 AM PDT by mewzilla (Was Obama surveilling John Roberts? Might explain a lot.)
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To: vannrox

After a dozen or more icy San Miguel’s in one of Magsaysay Street’s finest air-conditioned establishments, the monkey meat on a stick was mighty delicious consumed on the long walk across the Olongapo River to the gate to the base.


27 posted on 08/17/2017 6:55:35 AM PDT by VietVet876
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To: vannrox

28 posted on 08/17/2017 6:57:48 AM PDT by NorthMountain (The Democrats ... have lost their grip on reality -DJT)
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To: null and void
Everyone I know who has been to Thailand loved it. What was your experience?

First of all...it was the early 80's.Thailand may well have changed...for the better...since then.Basically,it was hot,dusty,poor and very "Asian" (meaning foreign).I'm not certain but I think it was my first experience with Asia (Japan,Hong Kong,Singapore,etc came much later).Actually,I now recall that it was just after my *very* first experience with Asia,India...which I hated (I was on a special Pan Am "Around the World" fare).It was my first exposure to Third World poverty and I was absolutely shocked,stunned and deeply unsettled by it.

So I guess my dislike for Thailand might have been a residual of my frightening stay in India.

29 posted on 08/17/2017 7:23:41 AM PDT by Gay State Conservative (ObamaCare Works For Those Who Don't.)
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To: Gay State Conservative

My first friend who was in Thailand was there during the Vietnam unpleasantness (Harold Conover, if you’re out there please check in). He absolutely adored the place, loved the people, loved the food, learned the language, etc.

He introduced me to Thai food, and taught me a little Thai, making me something of a rarity, someone who speaks some Thai (with a good accent), but has never been to Thailand...

Perhaps in the 13 months he was there, he was able to see past the economic poverty? He also didn’t have any earlier experiences to sour him on travel and discordant cultures, and came to it as a clean slate.

Now that I think about it mostly the Americans I know who who were there spent more that a few days or weeks, whether on deployment, or studying, or setting up or running a factory.


30 posted on 08/17/2017 8:06:34 AM PDT by null and void (You can only see into the future as far as you can see into your past.)
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To: NorthMountain
Came for the Demolition Man pic, left satisfied.

:-)

31 posted on 08/17/2017 8:28:39 AM PDT by Charles Martel (Progressives are the crab grass in the lawn of life.)
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To: null and void
My first friend who was in Thailand was there during the Vietnam unpleasantness (Harold Conover, if you’re out there please check in). He absolutely adored the place, loved the people, loved the food, learned the language, etc.

I was much luckier than your friend in that the Army,in its infinite wisdom,never ordered me to SE Asia (joined in 1969).I did travel there about 10 years ago because I felt a need to pay tribute,in my own quiet way,to our guys who did go there and did suffer there.

As an R&R spot it's easy to see how Thailand and the Phillipines would seem like paradise compared to what they just left.

However,I'll freely admit that my less than flattering assessment of the country could be entirely out of line....entirely unfair.Since my visit there I've done a good deal of traveling (First *and* Third World) and have come to recognize that a culture that works so well for us might not be the best one for other people.

32 posted on 08/17/2017 9:51:33 AM PDT by Gay State Conservative (ObamaCare Works For Those Who Don't.)
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To: where's_the_Outrage?

Beat me to it. Even the poor won’t eat trash rats because you’ll get so sick from them. But field rats are grain fed and free roaming and not only taste much better but also a lot less risk of getting ill!


33 posted on 08/17/2017 6:16:01 PM PDT by ALongRoadAhead
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