Merchant Refuses to Stop Selling Exotic Meats

An Inland Empire merchant says he has no plans to eliminate importing and selling lion steaks, kangaroo roasts and alpaca burgers.

Anshu Pathak is the owner of Exotic Meat Market, a wholesale supply firm in Perris that imports steaks, roasts and ground meat from hundreds of animals that are more familiar to viewers of the Animal Planet channel than the Food Network.

Available at his store are various cuts of bear, python, and python, which is imported from a farm in Vietnam.

The merchant has federal import permits and claims hundreds of customers across the nation for such specialties as lion steaks at $60 per half pound.

"Some people loathe me," admitted Pathak to the Press-Enterprise. "I'm Hindu-Brahmin. Where I grew up, the cow is sacred, But I'm in America now."

One of Pathak's customers, a high-end taco shop in Tucson, recently made worldwide Twitter posts when its plan to offer lion tacos was printed in the Arizona Daily Star. The Tucson taco shop backed down in the face of the publicity and resulting threats.

Pathak said he and his 10 employees have been threatened many times because they sell meat to gourmet butchers, restaurants, and some celebrities' chefs.

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Pathak's lion steaks come from farms in the Midwest, he told the newspaper, where lions are raised on farms and slaughtered for their fur. Until recently, he said, the meat was discarded.

And no, the meat does not all taste like chicken, Pathak told the Riverside Press-Enterprise.

"It all tastes different," he told the newspaper. "Chicken tastes like chicken. Python tastes like python."
 

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