Baking fish for a
living in Vietnam
A woman is shown baking fish on fire grates with burning
coals. Tuoi Tre
Broiled fish is a delicacy of a traditional village in the
north-central Vietnamese
Residents in Dien Van Commune in Dien Chau District have
earned their living by just baking fish for decades. Hundreds of local
families rely on that ‘business.’
The delicious smell of broiled fish covers Dien Van all
year round, regardless of weather conditions.
Though the job has been ‘industrialized’ with dozens of
well-built ovens, locals have been ‘faithful’ to the traditional method of
baking with coals because it ensures a better smell and taste than doing so
with electric ovens.
Thirty oven owners in Dien Van hire over 200 local women
to do the work.
Watching over the ovens are hundreds of workers, all of
whom are women, while men perform other tasks such as collecting and
transporting fish and distributing the baked fish to consumers.
Hoang Thi Thanh, an ‘oven worker’ in Trung Hau Village,
said her ‘working tools’ include fire grates to put fish on and masks and
gloves to cover her body to prevent burns.
“I’ve worked this job for over ten years. Without this
kind of ‘ninja uniform,’ heat from the ovens will scorch our skin, causing
injuries,” Thanh said.
Thanh added she uses two or three layers of gloves to
protect her skin.
A woman in 'ninja
uniform' is seen broiling fish. Photo: Tuoi Tre
Thanh is one of 20 women working for oven owner Ho Thi
Tam in
The owner Tam said she and her husband get up at 4:00 am
to start their business day. Her husband drives a small truck to beaches to
collect fresh fish from fishing boats.
He favors collecting fresh fish caught in the night
before resorting to frozen fish caught by bigger boats days before.
Tam said she earns an average net profit of VND500,000 –
1 million (US$23 – 46) a day. Each worker is paid VND160,000 ($7.4) a day.
Le Thi Huong, another oven owner, said broiled fish is
consumed most in the winter because of increasing demand from beer
restaurants.
But in the hot period, the harvest season of fishermen,
broiled fish is consumed less, she added.
Hoang Minh Long, chairman of the People’s Committee of
Dien Van Commune, told Tuoi Tre (Youth) newspaper that the local
fish baking villages produce 20 metric tons of broiled fish a day.
Baking fish is a long standing job in Dien Van and can
be considered a traditional profession there, said a local official.
But locals have become more prosperous on account of
this occupation in the last 20 years, Long added.
He revealed that he is completing documents to submit to
higher authorities to recognize the traditional trade villages and then Dien
Van authorities will take measures to protect the environment and ensure food
safety.
Fish are broiled on
burning coals. Photo: Tuoi Tre
TUOI TRE NEWS
|
Thứ Năm, 14 tháng 5, 2015
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