What does python taste like? Because it could be slithering onto our dinner plates. - own nothing. live in the pod. eat the snakes

What does python taste like? Because it could be slithering onto our dinner plates.​

A study conducted on two snake farms has found that breeding pythons for meat is more energy and resource-efficient than current livestock production, offering a viable protein alternative.​

By Sascha Pare published [March 15th, 2024]

Python meat is a low-effort and sustainable protein alternative that could soon slither onto our dinner plates, scientists suggest.

The researchers argue there are a plethora of benefits to farming pythons, including the snakes' ability to fast for extended periods of time, their low space and water requirements and minimal waste production.

Due to their large body size and fast growth rates — and without legs or wings to worry about — pythons are a highly efficient source of meat. The scientists published their findings Thursday (March 14) in the journal Scientific Reports.

"These animals are extremely good converters of food and particularly protein," study co-author Patrick Aust, a zoologist and research associate at the University of Oxford in the U.K., told ABC News. "Literally, they are specialists [at] making the most of very little."

Python farming is well-established in Asia but is yet to take off in other regions, according to the study. With current livestock production systems struggling to meet sustainability standards and growing demand, however, it may be time to consider alternatives.

"Over the last two decades, snake farming has expanded," the authors wrote in the study. "Reptile meat is not unlike chicken: high in protein, low in saturated fats, and with widespread aesthetic and culinary appeal."

The researchers monitored the growth rates of newborn Burmese (Python bivittatus) and reticulated (Malayopython reticulatus) pythons at two farms — one in Thailand's Uttaradit province and the other in Ho Chi Minh City, in Vietnam. Despite receiving food only once per week, both species grew rapidly and put on up to 1.6 ounces (46 grams) per day over a period of 12 months — by which time they can be slaughtered for meat, skins and other products. Female pythons grew larger than males, likely due to natural sex differences.

The researchers fed the pythons a variety of diets, including thawed frozen chicken, wild-caught rodents, fishmeal, chicken pellets and waste products from pork production.

Roughly a quarter of the food ingested by the snakes was converted to meat, regardless of which diet they were fed, and 82% of the snakes' body mass was edible meat by the end of the experiment. For comparison, the meat harvested from cattle generally amounts to about 63% of a cow's weight.

"In terms of food and protein conversion ratios, pythons outperform all mainstream agricultural species studied to date," the researchers wrote in the study. "Production efficiencies for pythons were higher than those reported for poultry, pork, beef, salmon, and crickets."

Pythons also maintained their body mass during periods of fasting that lasted as long as 127 consecutive days thanks to their flexible metabolism. Adult Burmese and reticulated pythons can weigh more than 220 pounds (100 kilograms) and females can produce up to 100 eggs per year, meaning they are "well suited for commercial production," according to the study.

The researchers highlighted the potential role of python farming in controlling rodent pests and upcycling waste products from other meat industries and agri-food supply chains, if the snakes are fed a diet rich in rodents and waste protein.

The only remaining hurdle to putting python meat on dinner plates is a limited understanding of how to keep thousands of these snakes in captivity, the authors wrote — that, and "the general fear humans have toward snakes."
 
To wit, the last time I drove through Williams there was a sign in Spanish and English reminding people that roosters are not allowed within city limits.
Fascinating isn't it? The West is already 3rd world as fuck and yet won't allow chickens to be kept like they do in the third world. That said, the alternative is quail.
 
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Went to the Rattlesnake Rodeo one time back in the 90s in Opp, Alabama. Tried fried rattlesnake and barbecued rattlesnake. It was all right. Gator and frog legs taste better.
 
I don't know where you live, but there's a whole racialized angle there.

To wit, the last time I drove through Williams there was a sign in Spanish and English reminding people that roosters are not allowed within city limits.
I take it some border town with a lot of Hispanics into cock fighting? Maybe there's a way to get the leftists on board with repealing these laws.
 
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I mean, no, replacing cows with snakes will just make the meat taste worse. I have to agree with AR and say that this would accomplish nothing, animals still die, so the hippie argument doesn't work.

Mind, if a redneck catches a snake in his chicken coop, he can eat it all right, that's all the laws of the jungle.
 
Not like it's an insectoid. If dragons were real, I'd want to eat them. I want to try bear meat even. What's the point of being the biggiest brain creature if you can't flex on the small-brains?
 
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I'd be down for eating more snake meat if it was really a viable substitute for beef. I actually love the versatility of some reptile meat, and the article isn't really wrong in that pythons are a somewhat attractive alternative protein source. The issue comes in trying to actually farm bigass strong snakes, and always has. If you've ever kept a reticulated python as a pet, you know what I mean. They are generally docile, but they can fuck things up pretty easily, and they aren't stupid as far as snakes go.

Trying to farm pythons at scale is pretty much ridiculous compared to what we currently do here in the US, given how much usable land we have for any other type of food animal. This to me is grasping at straws by left wing econazis and ofc the WEF trying to get people off beef because of the amount of methane cattle produce.

Yeah I'd eat the snakes, and I'm an outlier here in stating that yes, I will eat insects too, because I enjoy snacks like fried grasshoppers, but I will not submit to some gaggle of elitist nepotist faggots forcing me to eat only those types of protein sources in a retrograde plot to change the world to only favor them and their views. They can all suffocate on bags of cricket meal.
 
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Gator is fantastic, tastes like chicken, eats like steak. Like chicken it needs more flavor though so bring on the cajun spice.



Rabbit sucks, so many tiny little fucking bones, it's like when you get fish soup from a Korean restaurant and spend 2 hours eating your fucking lunch and pulling needles out of your pallet.

Which is probably also an issue with snake seeing as they are basically 100% ribs.
The bones aren't the issue with rabbit farming, the fact it'll outright kill you if you try to live off of it is. Rabbit starvation is a thing, its a form of protein poisoning. There is a reason nobody has ever tried to farm rabbits for large scale consumption

That said I can't think of an animal that is less efficient for farming than a snake. Too many bones, too many issues with raising them, too specific requirements for housing and they have to eat fairly large animals themselves, so the whole point is lost and you'll end up having to create farms to support your snake farms

We already have economical and highly efficient meat producing animals, they're called chickens
 
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Rattlesnake meat has long been a delicacy in the Nevada high desert (meaning anywhere in the state that's not Vegas or Reno). The desert is full of rattlers, so when other food sources got low pioneers simply shot and ate the snakes.

Today, rattler meat is mainly sold in small butcher shops, although Scolari's in the Reno area might sell it bc they are locally owned. That of course doesn't count the people who simply shoot the snakes themselves and take them home for preparation.

Nevada is the place where people battle it out (nonviolently) for yearly elk hunting "tickets", such a ticket usually allows the holder to venture into some godforsaken area in the literal middle of nowhere to kill a single elk. I keep telling people that Las Vegas is not Nevada, and they think I'm nuts, but they haven't been to, say, Fallon or Winnemucca. THAT is Nevada.

Every time something like this pops up the kneejerk reaction on Teh Farmz is "eat your bugs, citizen!" but sometimes the globohomo isn't completely out in cuckoolandia with their ideas.
 
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i rember survivorman ate a turtle and got worm parasites in his mouth. reptiles are a pass from me.
 
Python meat is a low-effort and sustainable protein alternative
Stopped reading. Pythons are a pain in the ass to hunt by merit of needing to tolerate owning and maintaining an airboat alone. Shit tastes like catfish fat and is as tough as a boot. It is not good eating, even with a lot of Old Bay.
 
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Female pythons grew larger than males, likely due to natural sex differences.
Quick, someone cancel this man!
Alligator you really only eat the tail, which can be a lot of meat, but most of the animal is a waste.
Nope. The jaw meat is better than the tail. But you're missing the legs and the ribs. You just have to trim any fat off.
Rabbit starvation is a thing, its a form of protein poisoning. There is a reason nobody has ever tried to farm rabbits for large scale consumption
Rabbit starvation is easily avoided by adding any fats and carbs to the meal. It only happens to people who LITERALLY eat nothing but straight rabbit meat because it's THAT lean and basically pure protein. As long as you put some oil in the pot when you cook it, you're fine.
 
I kind of wonder how snake would best be prepared... would you stew it?

If it's like crocodile then the proper answer would be to smoke it breaking the skin near the end to pepper it with spices. Honestly would give it a shot. I don't have a revulsion to this like the bugs.
 
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Gator is fantastic, tastes like chicken, eats like steak. Like chicken it needs more flavor though so bring on the cajun spice.
Can confirm. Fried gator tail is chicken tendies and fried fish in one absolutely godlike meal.
Stopped reading. Pythons are a pain in the ass to hunt by merit of needing to tolerate owning and maintaining an airboat alone. Shit tastes like catfish fat and is as tough as a boot. It is not good eating, even with a lot of Old Bay.
Is Old Bay really the divine blessing upon seafood people act like it is?
 
Such as here, where "Per pound of food, snake puts on the most meat" sounds efficient, until you learn the "food" is something hard to come by or requires a whole other industry, like growing clean rodents fed on grain to then be fed to snakes, while the cow just needs useless grass.

The researchers highlighted the potential role of python farming in controlling rodent pests and upcycling waste products from other meat industries and agri-food supply chains, if the snakes are fed a diet rich in rodents and waste protein.

They seem to not care about the cleanliness of the snake food.
 
I actually can't wait. Australians eat kangaroos, Chinese eat snakes, Koreans eat dogs, yet you can't find these meats outside of their respective countries. In a globalised world. It's deeply shameful and laughable. It proves that the world is indeed run by proto-vegans. I'm willing to pay a premium for snake meat and crocodile meat, yet no companies cater to my needs. I'm seething.
 
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