Snacks take on a new meaning

From the Malawi News in September 2009
Not sure what prompted me to dive into an enormous treasure trove of ancient travel brochures, tour guides, city and country maps, and newspaper clippings (all saved to use for future blog posts). Perhaps I thought it was high time to share more of our adventures. Or maybe I was just a bit peckish (Aussie slang for hungry) because near the top of the box, I found an old, snack-related clipping from the Malawi Times.

Travel treasures
Sixteen years ago, we spent almost 11 months on the back of an overland truck travelling south down the west side of the Africa and then north up the east. Along the way, Poor John and I bought local newspapers whenever we could (yes we are news junkies), hence this ancient clipping.
So what does it have to do with snacks? While some of us will opt for dips and chips, Malawians set a higher bar. They’re keen on roasted mice.
Back in 2009, the price of mice-on-a-stick went up, in fact it doubled. The price for a skewer of six roasted mice jumped from 100 to 200 Malawi kwacha (or from 6 to 12 US cents or 8 to 16 Aussie cents per stick).
Malawi’s mouse season is April to October, and some breeds of mice are harder to catch than others. I got a chuckle from some of the wording in the story. One mice trader didn’t say or explain how he caught mice. He ‘narrated’ the technique.

Fancy a roadside snack. Image from the internet
According to Google, mice skewers (called mpani) are still popular in Malawi and are even more expensive today. A skewer of just four mice now costs 200 Malawi kwacha.
What really surprised me was that a 100-gram serving of mice provides about 216 calories, 21 grams of protein, and 11 grams of fat. Nutritionally, it beats an equal portion of lamb shoulder.
Pity this snack has never gained popularity in Australia. Today farmers in Western Australia and South Australia are battling the worst mouse plague they have ever seen.
An estimated 8,000 mice live in every hectare of WA’s northern grain belt, and swarms of them are visible in paddocks and on roads at night. Farmers are trying to get a more potent poison to win the battle.

Roasted mice on sticks. Image from the internet

Oh boy. I experienced this roadside delicacy when I first visited Africa many years ago and the thought – or sight of it – didn’t improve during the second and third visits either. When I say “experienced” I don’t mean that I tried eating mousie, only that I saw the skewers, had them offered and very politely declined. The tails hanging down really got to me. I’m so sorry to hear about the infestation in Australia. The losses must be brutal.
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I haven’t tried mousie either. I get what you said about the tails. As for the infestation in Australia, on the radio today a farmer said he had watched mice digging up seeds that had just been planted.
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Wow!
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You could start a trend
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Hahaha! We’re having guests for dinner tonight and these aren’t on the menu.
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Thereby hangs a tail
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Indeed.
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Ahh Peggy, now I’ve seen everything.😊
Hope yourself and “Poor John” are keeping well.
Happy memories of our long-ago trip from London to Sydney
Eamon
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Wonderful memories from that trip. We’re off to Korea and Japan on Monday. Have you been travelling?
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Oh no… god no! I think I’d throw up if I saw this for real! I am just grateful I live in the city and not out on a farm, they are really having a tough time of it and I wouldn’t last a day!
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Never my choice for snack. Thanks for stopping by.
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Y’all are nuts! But over here people hunt rattlesnakes and eat them so…
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I had snake once in Southeast Asia. Just once.
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We had some mice in our summer house last year. If we ever catch them again then into the air fryer.
Thanks
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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Brilliant idea. Start a trend.
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I’m saying “No thanks” to whole mice on skewers, Peggy, but I loved this amusing story! I remember the great mouse plague of 1984 in Australia, with some farmers using flamethrowers to kill thousands of mice. They could have trapped them and exported them to Malawi! Best wishes, Pete.
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Thanks Pete. Sadly, we’ve had more great mouse plagues since 1984.
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Wow and ewww 🤢 … I have no other words.
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Perfect choices.
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I “liked” this post, but I must say it brought a bit of squeamishness to my pre-breakfast morning! Hope you two are doing well!
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We’re doing very well. Hope you are too. We’re off to Korea and Japan next week.
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I don’t know what is worse, Peggy. The mice or your statement, “We’re having guests for dinner tonight” Would they be skewered? 😳
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I couldn’t resist saying it that way.
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I wondered. Grin.
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Now Peggy, I need a bit of detail here. Are the mice gutted and is the head bitten off. The skin could be crispy. I need more information.
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Judging from the photos, the heads and tails seem to be there. Wish I could be of more help, but I never tried this delicacy and never got a recipe.
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I love this post, Peggy. It is funny, yet also informative not just in how cultures view the same thing so differently, but also the way you cleverly link it back to where you live to shine a light on the mice infestation and damage it is causing. I can just imagine the treasure trove of clippings you must have after so many years of travelling. Happy and safe travels to Japan and South Korea.
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Thanks Jolandi, I wonder what other inspiration I’ll find in that box. I must admit that there is more than one box of travel treasures. Hope one day to include memories from Portugal.
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This proves man could get used to eating any kind of protein and a good source at that. It is the thought of it that makes me gag. Did you try one?
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No, but I never saw them for sale, only in the newspaper article. I won’t list the things I did try.
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Oh please do!
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Maybe when it fits in a story.
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I’m sorry to hear about Australia’s mouse-spike–it’s a shame we can’t do something productive with such a food source.
Just maybe not when it’s the, um, whole body like that….
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Um, yeah!
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Such a fun and vivid little moment — really enjoyed the way you captured the snack experience.
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