Czech Christmas Carp

Time
Come Christmas season in Czechia - which these days seems to kick off right around 1 November - Prague's Old Town is a sea of market stalls, the scent of klobása (sausage) fills the air and svařák (hot wine) is clasped by many a shivering shopper. But who are the men in black leather aprons dumping blood and guts on the pavement? They are the purveyors of the traditional Czech Christmas delicacy - that's right: carp!

The vision of these men grabbing a large, gulping carp from the tub next to them, weighing it, whacking it on the head, then scaling and filleting it is strangely compulsive although you might not want to eat one, fish that is. Many Czechs don't like the freshwater fish, but eat it (breaded, fried with plum sauce on Christmas Eve) because it is traditional. Some aficionados though want their carp as fresh as possible so buy it live, convert their bathtub into a makeshift aquarium and do the gutting themselves for the day.

If you're staying in a hotel room or an Airbnb with a tub, we most certainly do not recommend trying this for yourself. Although that said, immersing oneself in local culture and traditions is one of the single best aspects of travelling, right? Right! Just make sure to clean things up afterwards, and please don't let anyone know you got the idea from us! 
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roger cooper

19. 12. 2011

You do not describe the situation correctly. As I enter my third Christmas in Prague I must say I've never seen a carp-seller "dumping blood and guts on the pavement". All (sorry most) animals that humans eat have to be killed and I don't think it is fair to stress the actual killing of fish in CZ. As a young man working on a farm in the UK I had to kill turkeys but it would not have been fair to describe the details online to customers?In my experience the CZ methods of killing carp are as humane as any others and the fish is certainly much fresher than in most countries' supermarkets. I do remember central Europeans keeping carp in their baths but don't believe that this is common today.