North Korea is a famine state. In the fields, you can see people picking up loose grains of rice and kernels of corn, gleaning every scrap. They look pinched and exhausted. In the few, dingy restaurants in the city, and even in the few modern hotels, you can read the Pyongyang Times through the soup, or the tea, or the coffee. Morsels of inexplicable fat or gristle are served as 'duck.' One evening I gave in and tried a bowl of dog stew, which at least tasted hearty and spicy—they wouldn't tell me the breed—but then found my appetite crucially diminished by the realization that I hadn't seen a domestic animal, not even the merest cat, in the whole time I was there.
Christopher HitchensStichwörter: cats dogs hotels starvation famine north-korea pyongyang north-korean-famine dog-meat korean-cuisine the-pyongyang-times
In a Pyongyang restaurant, don't ever ask for a doggie bag.
Christopher HitchensStichwörter: dogs humour north-korea pyongyang dog-meat korean-cuisine
He methodically basted the dark skin of the Alsatian, which he had stuffed with garlic and herbs.
"One rule in life", he murmured to himself. "If you can smell garlic, everything is all right".
Stichwörter: life dogs madness dog dinner smell j-g-ballard taboo ballard dog-meat james-graham-ballard jg-ballard garlic
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