We did see several happy dogs that morning. Glad that you are enjoying this series. There will be more on yak jerky in the main thread's Lijiang post.
Also, this morning I ran across
this page from a website on Yak Husbandry that describes the use of yak products, (including the hides) in detail. One thing the article does not mention is something I was told by our guide to the Shangri-La market: that yak bones (seen above with dried meat hanging) are used to make a long cooked soup that is served to new mothers to help them regain their strength after childbirth. I recall eating a Korean bone soup once in Chicago. I hope the yak soup turns out just as good as that soup.
The website mentioned above also points out that some new businesses have been established to make European-style aged cheese with Yak milk.
Yunnan Yak Cheese by
Josephine2004, on Flickr
We visited the shop of one of the Mei Xiang cheese makers and tasted their cheese. These residents of a remote mountain village of Langdu, Yunnan were assisted in this development project by a Wisconsin cheese maker. The video about the project can be found
here. I recommend the video for its interesting photos of a more remote village than any we visited during our trip.
And the cheese? Delicious! A butteriness is the first impression, even thought this cheese is dry and nutty like a manchego or a Parmesan. Wrapped in bark, it is pretty to look at as well. Too bad it is not being sold in the US. However, it can be obtained in major Chinese cities.
Last edited by
Josephine on February 25th, 2013, 9:20 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Man : I can't understand how a poet like you can eat that stuff.
T. S. Eliot: Ah, but you're not a poet.