Science Want a More Sustainable Meat for the Grill? Try a 13-Foot Python Steak. - Eat snake goy.

Pythons eat less, require very little water and grow faster than beef cattle and chicken. Are they a better food for the planet? These scientists say yes.​

The Washington Post
Rachel Pannett
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Anup Shah/Getty Images

They’re scaly, fork-tongued and can measure upward of 20 feet long. Pythons may also be one of the most Earth-friendly meats to farm on the planet.
A group of researchers studied two large python species over 12 months on farms in Thailand and Vietnam — where snake meat is considered a delicacy — and found that they were more efficient to raise than other livestock.
Their research, published Thursday in the journal Scientific Reports, suggests that python farming could offer a solution to rising food insecurity around the globe, exacerbated by climate change.
The researchers, who studied more than 4,600 pythons, found that both Burmese and reticulated pythons grew rapidly in their first year of life, and they required less food (in terms of what’s known as feed conversion: the amount of feed to produce a pound of meat) than other farmed products, including chicken, beef, pork, salmon — and even crickets.
The snakes were fed a mix of locally sourced food, including wild-caught rodents, pork byproducts and fish pellets. They gained up to 1.6 ounces a day, with the females growing faster than their male counterparts.
The snakes were never force-fed, and the researchers found that the reptiles could fast for long periods without losing much body mass, which meant they required less labor for feeding than traditional farmed animals.
“They need very little water. A python can live off the dew that forms on its scales. In the morning, it just drinks off its scales and that’s enough,” said Daniel Natusch, a herpetologist and biodiversity expert who was involved in the research. “Theoretically you could just stop feeding it for a year.”
In a world where scientists predict climate change will lead to more extreme weatherand environmental shocks, a species that is heat-tolerant, resilient to food shortages and able to produce protein “far more efficiently than anything else studied to date” is “almost a dream come true,” Natusch said.

Tastes like chicken​

Snakes have long been prized in Asia, where they are used in traditional medicines, as well as in dishes such as Hong Kong’s famed snake soup. In recent years, snake farms have sprung up across Southeast Asia and China, catering to growing demand for snake meat and skins, used in luxury leather goods.
During his research, Natusch ate snake barbecued, sauteed on skewers, in curries and as jerky. He described the taste as similar to chicken, but a little more gamy. Because snakes don’t have limbs, very little is wasted in butchering, he said. And it is remarkably easy to fillet: “You just bring your knife along that backstrap and you get a four-meter-long piece of meat.”
Even so, Natusch acknowledges that snakes are unlikely to form a big part of Western diets any time soon. In his native Australia, he said, “the only good snake is a dead snake. People are pretty afraid of them.” (Pythons are nonvenomous and generally slow-moving, but they do have large teeth and may bite if provoked. They have been known to eat small pets including cats and dogs.)
In the United States, Burmese pythons are considered an invasive species, having proliferated in Florida’s Everglades, where they are hunted to cull the population. In a study last year, the U.S. Geological Survey described Florida’s python problem as “one of the most challenging invasive species management issues worldwide.”
Because store-bought meat is relatively inexpensive and easier to come by than catching these slippery creatures, Natusch doesn’t envision a future in which snake farming becomes a fix to America’s python woes. But he does see the snakes as a potential climate solution for farmers in places like Africa, where food insecurity is a growing problem as climate disasters outpace any innovation in farming techniques.
“As long as [farmers are] happy to catch a few pest rodents in their corn or their maize, and feed them to a python every now and again, you’ve got some high-quality, resilient protein right there,” he said.

Simple needs​

A python’s needs are fairly basic. They’re sedentary by nature and coexist happily with other snakes, displaying “few of the complex animal welfare issues commonly seen in caged birds and mammals,” the researchers said.
Although some conservationists have expressed concerns that commercial snake farming could lead to the illegal harvesting of wild populations, Natusch — who chairs a group of snake specialists for the International Union for Conservation of Nature — argues that the opposite is true: It gives local communities a financial incentiveto conserve wild populations and the habitats on which they depend.
The barriers to entry for snake farming are low in comparison with lab-grown meat, which carries significant costs and requires technical expertise. In Asia, snakes are housed in simple enclosures in warehouses. And even without the kind of genetic engineering applied over the years to domesticated animals like cows and chickens, snakes stand out, he said.
“We’re just scratching the surface here, basically the baseline product: The animal in its natural form without any domestication or anything, still outperforms all those other taxa.”
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This reminds me of that time on Survivorman where he was in a Florida or Louisiana swamp and didn't have anthing substantial to eat for days then he caught and cooked this huge ass snake. It was so rich it actually made him start shaking and freak out a little bit.
I'm not opposed to trying snake steak once or even more often if I liked it but I think it's going to be hard to get people to consider snake filet as Normal Food. Maybe in south Florida where pythons are common this would fly but not anywhere else in America.
 
might have just been terrible preperation) but it was pretty tough for what I would assume would be similar reasons.
I can almost guarantee you it was overcooked. It should be a texture similar to a mix between a light/mild fish and chicken. Cook it even a fraction too long and it gets the consistency of tire rubber.
 
Snake >> Bugs

If I have to eat the NuMeat, I'll take the snake.

I recall there was a study announced that FL was looking into how everything levels were in the invasive iguanas with hopes of them being able to be suggested for eating.
but yeah from what I understand any sort of higher level predator you'll want to keep an eye out for mercury or whatevers

It's a principle called biomagnification. The higher up the food chain you go, the more likely it is to contain crap like heavy metals, PCB, pesticide residues, etc... because of biomagnification. That's why mercury is a problem with all the fish that are predators, but not so much for the fish that arent.
 
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Ive eaten snek, it's not bad actually. I can't imagine making pythons a regular part of my diet though. Apex predators are lousy with mercury.

This is why swordfish and tuna steaks are only a rare indulgence for me, but I eat self caught panfish and walleye and trout several times a month. They don't get big enough or live long enough to become completely saturated with mercury and pcbs to be a problem like mega fauna predators do.
 
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Alcohol of any kind is good in a marinade, beer especially—keep in mind you'll want to pair those yeasty, hoppy flavors with mustard, brown sugar/molasses, etc. Beer also makes a rich, fluffy batter, so you could do both if you wanted "drunken python nuggies".
Beer-battered fish and chips are pretty good, and I've had fried gator tail that was pretty solid, so... speaking more seriously and less with the snek gimmick I have at times you could probably make a real tasty meal of snake and chips.
 
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