Aaaah... Vietnamese Savor the Aroma Of Civet-Dung Coffee --- Rare, Fox-Like Creature Has A Taste for Best Beans; Then, Nature Takes Over

DAKLAK, Vietnam -- Coffee farmer Ho Hoang Yen fondly remembers one of his boyhood chores of half a century ago. With mist rolling off the hills, he would rise at dawn, trek through the lush highland wilderness, and forage beneath dewy bushes for the finest coffee beans. Mr. Yen says it has been seve...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inWall Street journal. Europe
Main Author By Samantha Marshall
Format Newspaper Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Brussels Dow Jones & Company Inc 18.03.1999
EditionEurope
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:DAKLAK, Vietnam -- Coffee farmer Ho Hoang Yen fondly remembers one of his boyhood chores of half a century ago. With mist rolling off the hills, he would rise at dawn, trek through the lush highland wilderness, and forage beneath dewy bushes for the finest coffee beans. Mr. Yen says it has been seven years since he has savored a cup of the improbable beverage, because Vietnam -- one of the world's big coffee exporters -- has been doing an injustice to one of its most instinctive coffee connoisseurs: the civet cat, a creature of the Viverridae family that looks something like a fox but is actually a cousin of the mongoose. Another reason caphe cut chon is disappearing from dinner tables: Civet cats are showing up as the main course. At the bustling Bac Map restaurant in coffee country's provincial capital, Buon Me Thuot, barbecued civet cat is a big-selling delicacy among newly rich coffee traders, says Chung Hue Bac, the proprietor. He isn't too troubled by the resultant scarcity of caphe cut chon. "I'd much rather eat the fox," he says.
ISSN:0921-9986