Sunday, July 08, 2007

Yak in Yunnan

On location in Yunnan, Southwest China.

Mom and I recently had a little vacation in Yunnan Province, Southwest China. It was our first time to the region, and we had such a good time, we're already talking about going back. I'll publish a series of stories about Yunnan's weird meat choices over the next few weeks.

yak steak Dali guesthouse

Yucky yak steak.

Yunnan borders Tibet, and there are lots of Tibetan people in the area, so naturally, you can find lots of yak meat and yak butter tea. The first we tried was in Dali's old city -- yak steak at a Tibetan theme guesthouse restaurant. It was sweeter than we expected -- sweeter than beef, and not musky like mutton (we expected it to, but were pleasantly surprised, not being big fans of lamb and mutton). This yak steak was tenderized to a flaccid pulp and we shared the leftovers with many of the cute puppies whimpering about. (What is it with Dali and Lijiang -- everyone seems to have a brand new puppy, and they're the most irresistibly cute doggies we've seen anywhere.) We didn't see any on the menu, so we can't tell you if they are as delicious as they are cute.

cute puppy Lijiang

Little puppy wants some yak scraps.

Next day, before a gorgeous trip up the mountain overlooking Dali and Erhu lake, we had our first yak butter tea. I'm not sure how authentic this one was, but it was by far our favorite of all the yak butter teas we'd try over the next week. It was frothed up like a creamy cappuccino, with sweet-spicy tea (like Indian chai), and yak milk and butter blended into a expertly balanced flavor. Mmmm. One of the culinary highlights of our trip.

yak butter milk tea Dali

Fancy yuppie yak butter tea with frothy yak milk.

Lijiang is further into yak country, so we had the more authentic stuff here. We started with a fine little meal at the infamously named "Flourishing Sanck" [sic] near the village square, which features such chinglish menu doozies as "Potato The Crap". We ordered the stir-fried yak with celery, which was great, and so much better than that sad excuse for a yak steak in Dali. And we ordered the "small pot" of the yak butter tea. This turned out to be an enormous pot enough for 10 people. Completely different from that sophisticated concoction in Dali, this was the real stuff, with a strong yakky-butter smell, and no creaminess. We still liked it, and didn't find it as off-putting as many tourists complain about, but we admit liking the yuppie one better.

yak stir-fry and yak butter tea, Lijiang, Yunnan

Welcome to Flourishing Sanck!

Exploring the charming cobbled-laned village of Lijiang, we found several shacks selling yak jerkies and various dried yak meats. We tasted a lot of these and found them scrumptious.

yak jerky Lijiang

The spicy fatty one made a nice snack on top of the Jade Snow Mountain. The area around here -- you can see why they're claiming it as the mythical inspiration for Shangri-La. Naxi-Dongba culture is unique -- claims to be the world's only surviving matriarchal society, and the only pictographic language -- and there's an incredible range of herbs, edible plants and mushrooms and flowers.

jade snow mountain, yulong shan, oxygen

Atop Jade Snow Mountain (YuLong Shan) north of Lijiang, near Tibet.


cafe in Dali, Yunnan

Mom, did you fart? Or is that the yak butter tea?



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7 Comments:

At Tuesday, 10 July, 2007, Blogger Michael said...

Thanks for the new post. I found your blog a week ago ...and think it's great. You've gotten me hooked on natto with your entry about it.

Have fun....and write more....please.

 
At Wednesday, 11 July, 2007, Blogger Jaime K. Ohlsson said...

that is the cutest picture i've ever seen of mom! yak butter tea sounds delicious. your writing makes me hungry.

 
At Wednesday, 11 July, 2007, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I just discovered your blog googling other things I am too embarassed to mention. Nice job! My friend is Moxie, whos a famous blogger. keep up the good work1
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At Thursday, 12 July, 2007, Blogger Kit said...

actually, the kuna people of the san blas archipelago (kunayala) off the atlantic coast of panama are also a matriarchal society...but they sure as hell don't practice walking marriage or regularly allow tourists into their venice-like island cities built on stilts and reclaimed land. so tell those crazy naxi ren they're wrong about that.

 
At Friday, 20 July, 2007, Anonymous Anonymous said...

"yak butter tea"

Is that made from pu-erh tea?

 
At Thursday, 26 July, 2007, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Thats the CUTEST DOG EVER!

 
At Friday, 28 December, 2007, Anonymous MEAT LOVER!! said...

You can actually order Yak Meat online and have it shipped to you. They have all kinds of cool meats like Python etc. the web site is exoticmeats.com.

 

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