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Taiwan prisoners step into the kitchen as ‘jail food’ becomes popular
Demand grows for inmates’ high-quality food after string of food safety scandals
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If it were not for the locked doors, knives chained to the table and uniformed staff, the food factory inside Taoyuan women’s prison would resemble any commercial kitchen.
Inmates wearing masks and hairnets mix cocoa powder to make chocolate, or chop cabbage to marinate for kimchi.
They are part of a burgeoning food industry in Taiwan – artisan snacks, made behind bars.
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The additive-free delicacies made by prison inmates have gained a loyal public following, and generate hundreds of millions of dollars each year.
Demand is driven by quality and affordability after a string of food safety scandals has made Taiwan consumers extra vigilant.
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