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Chinese medicinal wines still have a place in TCM, treating arthritis, period pain and more
A traditional Chinese medicine expert says the alcoholic drinks made for centuries with snake to safflower can still be the ‘best therapy’
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It might sound like the stuff of nightmares: Chinese medicinal shop shelves lined with jars containing snakes and lizards pickled in a murky mix of liquid and herbs. But they serve a healthy purpose.
Chinese medicinal wines have been around for almost as long as traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) itself.
To make them, snakes, geckos and other creatures are steeped in alcohol for months or years, along with herbs, to extract their perceived medicinal “essence”. They are used as powerful tonics to treat ailments from rheumatism to arthritis, and to boost male vitality by warming the body and promoting blood circulation.
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The popularity of Chinese medicinal wines in Hong Kong has waned since their heyday in the 1970s and ’80s, when mainland Chinese varieties such as Shi Quan Da Bu Jiu – “the 10 complete wellness wine” – were household names.

Hong Kong-based TCM practitioner Samuel To Ching-san cites several reasons for their fall in popularity.
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