Showing posts with label Foie Gras. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Foie Gras. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 14

Eurostar re-launched at St Pancras, London! A Big day for Anglo-Franco tourism!




The Big Day has arrived! 14 November 2007, and the new terminal for the Eurostar train service at St Pancras in London has opened -- bringing with it a range of improvements and special services, one of which is a good 20 minute reduction on the London-Paris route!


For more details, read the blog entry of 10 November 2007 and by all means, click on the link above for the Eurostar website -- it is impressive -- and sure the whet your appetite! You can also subscribe to their newsletter by simply filling in your email address at the bottom -- and it is well worth your while as I see there are already very exciting special offers available in fares!

What a pity they did not think about combining the first Paris-London-Paris trip with the midnight appearance of the 2007 Beaujolais Nouveau -- a few hours and it could have been the event of the decade!.........But -- nothing stops you from booking your ticket straight-away and coming down to the Dordogne anyway to come marvel at the exquisite autumn colours in this region, enjoy an excellent meal of foie gras, confit de canard and pommes sarladaise, and of course, a bottle of 2007 Beaujolais Nouveau!

See you there!


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  • Tuesday, August 21

    Food writing that leaves a bitter after taste...

    In an article he titles "When food tribes go abroad", Jay Rayner of the Observer Food Monthly, gives a somewhat bitter and twisted view of any- and everyone who ventures across the channel to come and enjoy the different lifestyle of life in La Belle France.

    He starts off well --- "Holiday eating is like holiday sex: nowhere near as exotic as you think it's going to be but just as risky. You can pick up a dose of something very nasty doing both. My parents, siblings and I still talk fondly of the violent food poisoning we acquired in some dodgy cantina on Ibiza. We were all taken out by it, one by one, within hours. Oh, how we laughed."

    He continues to make an astute remark: "These things happen, of course - but they carry such significance on holiday because our expectations are so damn high. We insist that everything be wondrously lovely and this makes us behave very oddly indeed where food is concerned. The meal at the end of a day is an expression of who we are, of how we like to imagine our true selves to be."

    But then his not-so-sub-conscious envy of all who have the good fortune to come to this part of the world to sample the gastronomic delights -- and disasters -- of a foreign and different culture, bubbles to the top and forms an unsightly and distasteful scum which completely covers any other possible tasty bits that may still have been underneath -- and as much as I tried to skim it off, hoping to reveal something that would reveal a tongue-in-cheek soupcon of dry humour, even if somewhat twisted, there was none. Just a bitter brew -- with a strong flavour of sour grapes.

    "After some rigorous research, I have been able to sort the modern British gastro-traveller into five distinct, and equally irritating, categories. And they start with ...

    1. The Dordogne Bore

    Dordogne Bores have been holidaying in crumbling gites around Bergerac for the last two decades. They insist on calling it Périgord, and throw around words like 'paysanne' and 'terroir' to bolster their foodie credentials. They also claim to have a handful of their own 'secret' little places where they go to eat; restaurants so far off the beaten track that their location is known only by 23,000 other people from Dorking, Guildford and Cheltenham.

    What the DB will never recognise is that every single restaurant in the region serves exactly the same bloody food: duck confit, foie gras, more duck confit, herb omelettes, duck confit and more duck bloody confit. What's more, 85 per cent of the restaurants will serve mediocre versions of these dishes, though the DB will either not notice or not acknowledge this. Usually this is because they are plastered on cheap wine, arguing that you don't have to spend big money 'down here' to get good wine. This, too, is nonsense. No matter; they will praise the 'civilised' French attitude to drinking, while failing to recognise that France has one of the highest rates of alcohol-induced liver disease in Europe.
    Most likely to be found in: the Dordogne, natch; the Lot and Garonne; Tuscany.

    2. The Authenticity Addicts

    The AA is convinced that only by eating exactly what the locals eat can they really connect with the culture they are visiting. This means they end up consuming some of the nastiest food items ever devised, though they will always claim to really, really like them: stews made from goat intestines; braised cow's udder; pressed pig's ear in vinegar. What the AA fails to recognise is that renowned local dishes like these are almost always the product of poverty, and therefore generally more a matter of necessity than tastiness.
    Most likely to be found in: India; China; Thailand; and the more wretched, typhus-sodden corners of the former Soviet Union.

    3. The Anything-with-a-View Crew

    Everybody knows that the worst restaurants in any fishing town are the ones right on the water, where the smell of food is undercut by the foul stench of the stagnant sea-bilge lip-lapping at the harbourside. The owners of these prime pitches know that the punters will come solely for the location, so they don't have to worry about the quality of the food, plus they can also charge the suckers roughly double what those places a street back are charging.

    The AWAVC will happily leave the beach at five in the afternoon to drive two hours into the mountains to this 'fabulous little bistro with the most fantastic view of the sunset', forgetting that, after the first half hour, the sun will have indeed set and that they will then be eating their mediocre dinner in total darkness.
    Most likely to be found in: the Greek islands; Provence; Sardinia.

    4. The Gastro Tourist

    The GT regards a holiday as an eating opportunity, and time spent on the beach between lunch and dinner as an irritating distraction. The GT needs only one holiday read - the Michelin Guide, and will tick off restaurants as they go. But few of the meals they pay astronomical sums for will meet with their approval, as the GT has shockingly high standards and cannot be conned by gastronomic smoke and mirrors.
    Most likely to be found in: Burgundy; around Lyon; northern Spain near San Sebastian; Catalonia.

    5. The Market Kings

    Market Kings stay in villas or gites and never eat out because, as they insist, loudly and often, 'really, why would you when the produce in the markets here is so fabulous, I mean look at the tomatoes nothing like the flavourless rubbish you get back home and the peppers are so sweet you could eat them for dessert. Here try some of the bread - it's made by a local man who's 103, blind, incontinent and crippled by arthritis but he's still got the touch ...'
    The MK gets up every morning at six to go to the local village to buy their produce (even though exactly the same stuff is available at half the price at Carrefour nearby).
    Most likely to be found in: Tuscany; Dordogne; Provence."


    The Observer Food Monthly would do well to send Mr Rayner on one of our excellent Relocation Orientation courses at the Chateau Lalinde before allowing him to write another article about something he knows so little about or on which he holds such prejudiced -- or should I say, 'jaundiced' views; and Jay Rayner would do well to forget about the frissons of 'risky sex' in Ibiza and rather come enjoy a heavenly few days in -- yes! the Périgord, also known as the Dordogne, and soon officially to be known as Dordogne Périgord -- where we will initiate him into the true pleasures of life -- which I can guarantee will exclude anything boring, but include a fair few pleasurable hours of fine dining with interesting people and stimulating conversation.


    POST SCRIPT: See Jay Rayner's response in comments below.

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  • Friday, June 1

    The Foie Gras debate

    Agence France Presse reports that former James Bond star Roger Moore is calling for a ban on the sale of foie gras in Britain. The actor, who starred in films including "Live And Let Die" and "A View To A Kill", has written to lawmakers urging them to support calls for the move by People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA).
    "I wholeheartedly support this campaign and with your help, I believe that we will soon see an end to this brutal and inherently cruel 'delicacy,'" he wrote. The letter and an accompanying DVD, which highlight the "cruel" process used to produce foie gras, also call on legislators to sign a parliamentary motion supporting a ban which has so far been backed by 83 of them.
    The motion notes that, to produce the delicacy, "12 week old ducks and geese are restrained and grain is forced down the throat through a gavage pipe, a process that often results in physical injury." It adds that the process swells the birds' livers to up to 10 times their normal size causing "great pain" and calls on the government to ban the sale of foie gras in Britain.
    Earlier this month, nearly 9,000 members of the public signed a petition calling for a ban submitted by a local councillor from York, north England, to the website of Prime Minister Tony Blair's Downing Street office. In the United States, California and Chicago have already banned the sale of foie gras, while production is prohibited in countries including Germany and Italy.


    Spot the Difference:


    An 'adored' family pet dying a slow and painful death caused by the clogging up of arteries and too much weight pressure on joints and limbs and spine and the 'gavage' of a goose



    An obese child on a couch with bowls of junk food and geese on a foie gras farm roaming free in wide space and open air


    One of the most common causes of overweight in children is overfeeding,” according to Dr. Philip Nader, a paediatrician and professor emeritus at the University of California at San Diego. Lead researcher Rachel Kimbro of the University of Wisconsin at Madison, USA, adds to this non sequitur: “These children are already disadvantaged (because often their families are poor,) and by age 3 they are on track for a lifetime of health problems related to obesity.”
    The MSNBC site reports that some 17 percent of U.S. youngsters are obese, and millions more are overweight. Recent statistics published in Britain were equally disturbing, and serious measures are planned to change an entire nation's bad eating and exercise habits. Obesity can lead to diabetes, high blood pressure and cholesterol, sleep problems and other disorders — and the problem starts early. Overweight preschoolers have a five times higher risk of being fat at age 12 than do lean preschoolers.

    I am loathe to use one negative to defend another. It solves nothing. But my question in this debate is why do people become so vehement in their fight for the plight of the fowls that are bred and raised to provide an important product -- important in the livelihood of many very hard-working farming communities - while back at home their children are more likely as not under-exercised and overweight because while their parents are out there fighting for the rights of ducks and geese, they are left at home to fend for themselves with take-away pizzas and MacDo double whopper hamburgers and French fries, packets of crisps and cola's. And let's not forget their pets which are equally overfed and under exercised and dying a slow death of malnutrition and weight related medical conditions.

    I will never defend any practice, for whatever reason, where animals of any kind are abused, caused pain or kept in inhumane conditions. Unfortunately there will always be those who will cause pain to animals. There is also no denying that there are cases where the birds are injured in the 'gavage' feeding process - just as all animals on all farms are exposed to possible injury. However, in the foie gras production business, each bird is literally worth its weight in gold, so it very much in the best interest of the farmer to treat them with the best and gentlest of care, to keep them in good health and the best possible environment, so rather fight for more inspections, closer monitoring, stricter licensing for foie gras producers -- and concentrate the animal-rights fighting energy for such things as bear baiting and travelling circuses.


    There are many reasons why celebrities, such as Roger Moore make sure they get easy and quick media attention by getting involved with animal rights movements -- but that is another story........Generally speaking, I realise that possibly the main reason that there is such an outcry against the production of foie gras, is firstly the fact that this is a luxury item -- it costs a lot of money for a small portion of foie gras (it is such a small micro-industry and the production process so labour intensive that the volume is of course limited) and therefore only a small handful of people can afford to ever eat it, and secondly the fact that it is consequently not a necessary or important food item for the consumer.


    The recorded historical background of Foie gras goes back to Egyptian times.
    The Egyptians observed that wild geese and ducks binge-eat - or 'force-feed' themselves before undertaking their seasonal migration in order to build up vast quantities of fat reserves in the live. They used this natural phenomenon, except that, when domesticating the fowls, they started inducing the natural over-feeding all year round. When, later, the Romans continued this practice, they went one further and used figs to fee the fowls -- from there the origin of the word foie (liver) -- from "ficandum" or fig. Jewish immigrants introduced geese to Alsace and served goose on their feast days as an alternative to the pork that was common in the area. For a long time these Jews of central Europe were the only ones to know the secrets of good foie gras.

    Today, 90% of France's foie gras is produced in the Perigord in southwest France, by far the largest foie gras-producing region in the world. The French consume 75% of the world production. Between 1992 and 2002, French production doubled, with 95% of the foie gras coming from ducks and 5% from geese.

    The primary objection that some people have to foie gras is the feeding method used to produce the product. The birds must be overfed in order to create the fattened liver. The liver enlarges over the course of the feeding process known as gavage. Claims have been made that the enlarged liver is "diseased". This is not true. In fact, it has been shown the liver shrinks back down to its normal size when a bird returns to lesser amounts of food intake. There is no evidence that the tube feeding method used to produce foie gras is inhumane. Being fed through a tube may sound unappealing to humans; however, it is important to remember that the oesophagus of a duck or goose is very different from ours. In nature, these birds are accustomed to storing fish and other foods in their oesophagus, sometimes for long periods of time. I have spent a lot of time with friends who raise geese and ducks to produce foie gras, and have seen how the birds crowds around her when it is feeding time, clamouring to be the first to be fed. I have also seen these same friends sit with tears streaming down their faces, killing their few hundred birds rather than confine them to an enclosed and cramped space when the law demanded it during the bird flu scare in France.

    The perception of foie gras as a luxury–and therefore wasteful product is another objection sometimes voiced by foie gras opponents. Contrary to what some people believe, almost every part of the mallard ducks that are raised for foie gras are used, more than any other bird raised for human consumption. The breasts, legs, wings, carcasses, tongues, feet, intestines, feathers and duck fat are all utilized. In fact, it is probably one of the few animals of which every possible part is used.


    Based on expertise borne of generations of experience, France has defined this business and set strict limits on what can be called foie gras in France. Very strict inspections are regularly conducted on all producing farms, vaccinations, food quality, environment quality and the general well-being of the animals are of utmost importance to keep the standards of the highest quality, as well as in the interests of the birds. For a country where most other animals do not enjoy too many humane concessions, the geese and ducks are the conspicuous exception. From the very old and highly respected firms to the many specialized local markets and the stays or cooking classes offered by small producers, foie gras in France is much more than business: it is a highly cultural aspect of life and society.

    Nutritional Facts
    Per Serving Size of 2 oz or 56g
    Calories 250
    Calories From Fat 220
    Total Fat 24g 37%
    Saturated Fat 7g 33%
    Foie gras is surprisingly low in bad fats and high in good fats. Many studies conducted by well-known and respected authorities have proven foie gras is as healthful as any other meat, although moderation is the key. We know that France consumes the largest portion of the world's foie gras production; yet, there are far fewer cardio-vascular diseases in France than in the USA, for instance, and the life expectancy is higher in France as well.

    • Foie gras cru - raw foie gras
    • Foie gras frais - fresh foie gras: This is usually purchased from delicatessens and is cooked in pots. It will keep for about one week in the refrigerator.
    • Foie gras mi-cuit: foie gras semi-cooked: This preparation is sold in cans and will keep for 3 months in the refrigerator once it is opened. It can be labelled in a variety of ways.
    • Foie gras de conserve - preserved foie gras which is sold in jars and preserved in its own fat, it will keep for years and improves like wine.

    Glossary:
    * Foie gras d'oie entier - whole goose foie gras
    * Foie gras de canard entier - whole duck foie gras
    * Foie gras au naturel - Pure whole livers
    * Bloc de foie gras or parfait de foie gras - liver compacted from small pieces and may include truffles
    * Pâté de foie d'oie - whole goose liver coated with forcemeat.

    Where should we rather start?



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