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] also has a thriving foie gras industry. Many Canadian chefs use Québec foie gras as a demonstration of national pride. | ] also has a thriving foie gras industry. Many Canadian chefs use Québec foie gras as a demonstration of national pride. | ||
==Production methods== | |||
Ducks and geese are ], and like many birds, have very elastic throats which expand and allow them to store whole food, or large amounts of food, in the ] while awaiting digestion in the stomach. In the wild this dilation allows them to swallow large items, such as a whole fish, for a long digestive process. Wild geese may consume 300 grams of protein and another 800 grams of grasses per day. Farmed geese allowed to graze on carrots adapt to eat 100 grams of protein, but may consume up to 2½ kilograms of the carrots per day. A wild duck may double its weight in the autumn, storing fat throughout much of its body and especially on the liver. This weight gain is entirely reversible both in the wild and with farmed fowl used in foie gras production. | |||
The geese or ducks used in foie gras production are initially free range, feeding on grasses that toughen the ]. While still free roaming they are gradually introduced to a high starch diet that by itself leads to about half of the enlarged liver's size. The next feeding phase, which the French call ''finition d'engraissement'', or "completing the fattening process", involves forced daily ingestion of controlled amounts of feed for 12 to 15 days with ducks and for 15 to 18 days with geese. During this phase ducks are usually fed twice daily while geese are usually fed 3 times daily. In modern production, the animal recieves a controlled amount depending on the the stage of the process, the weight of the animal, and the amount it last ingested. Typically, at the start of production an animal might be fed 200 grams of food per day and up to 450 grams at its last meal. The feed is administered using a funnel fitted with a large tube (20 to 30 cm long) which forces the feed into the animal's esophagus. If using an auger system to drive the feed, the procedure takes about 45 to 60 seconds. If using a pneumatic system, the process takes about 2 to 3 seconds. Care is taken during the feeding process to ensure no damage to the esophagus occurs, which could cause injury or death in the animal.<ref> Committee on Animal Health and Animal Welfare on Welfare Aspects of the Production of Foie Gras in Ducks and Geese, section 3.2</ref> | |||
Force feeding exploits a natural process through which geese and ducks store fat in their livers in preparation for winter ]. <ref> Committee on Animal Health and Animal Welfare on Welfare Aspects of the Production of Foie Gras in Ducks and Geese, section 4</ref> The feed, usually corn which is boiled with fat to facilitate ingestion, causes large amounts of ] to deposit in the liver producing the buttery consistency. | |||
Geese used in foie gras production are generally Moullard geese. The ducks used are sterile hybrids: males of the species '']'' are crossed with female domestic ducks ('']''). These ducks are usually preferred to geese, as the carcass of a fattened duck is more valuable than that of a goose; other uses of ducks include popular dishes such as '']'' (duck confit). | |||
==Presentation== | ==Presentation== |
Revision as of 06:32, 18 June 2006
Foie gras (French for "fat liver") is the fattened liver of a duck or goose that has been overfed. Along with truffles, foie gras is considered one of the greatest delicacies in French cuisine. It is very rich and buttery, with a delicate flavour unlike regular duck or goose liver.
Animal rights organizations regard the production method as cruel.
History
Ancient times
As far back as 2500 BC, it is possible that the Egyptians sought the fattened livers of migratory birds as a delicacy. They soon learned that many birds could be fattened through overfeeding and began the practice of overfeeding captive geese. In the necropolis of Saqqara, the tomb of Mereruka, an important royal official, contains a bas relief of a scene in which slaves grasp geese around the necks in order to push pellets down their throats. By their sides stand tables piled with more pellets, probably made from roast grain, and a flask for moistening the feed before giving it to the geese.
The practice of geese-fattening spread from Egypt to the Mediterranean. The earliest reference to fattened geese comes in 5th century BC from the Greek poet Cratinus, who wrote of "geese-fatteners". But Egypt yet maintained its reputation as a source for fattened geese. When the Spartan king Agesilaus visited Egypt in 361 BC, he was greeted with "fattened geese and calves," the riches of Egyptian farmers.
However, it was not until the Roman period that foie gras was ever mentioned as a distinct food, to which Romans gave the name iecur ficatum. Iecur means liver and ficatum draws its root from ficus, meaning fig in Latin. Pliny the Elder credits the Roman gastronome Apicius, to whom the sole surviving Roman cookbook is attributed, with feeding dried figs to geese to enlarge their livers. Hence the term iecur ficatum, fig-stuffed liver. Ficatum was so closely associated with animal liver that it became the root for foie in French, higado in Spanish, fígado in Portuguese, and fegato in Italian, all meaning liver in each respective language. The idea of feeding figs to enlarge goose liver may have been derived from Hellenistic Alexandria, since much of Roman luxury cuisine owes its inspirations to the Greeks.
Postclassical Europe
After the fall of the Roman empire, goose liver temporarily vanished from European cuisine. It has been claimed that Gallic farmers had preserved the tradition of making foie gras for centuries until it was rediscovered, however this theory lacks any plausible evidence since it is known that the sources of meat for medieval French peasants were mainly pig and sheep. It is more likely that the tradition has been preserved by the Jews who learned the method of enlarging goose liver under the Roman colonization of Israel. The Jews carried this knowledge as they migrated to the further north and west. Kashrut, the dietary law of Judaism, forbade them to use lard as cooking oil, and butter was not an alternative since it was also prohibited to mix dairy with meats. The Jews had used olive oil in the Mediterranean and sesame oil in Babylonia, but neither of them was easily available in the Western and Central Europe, so they turned to poultry fat which they could produce in abundancy through overfeeding geese. The delicate taste of its liver was soon appreciated, as it was witnessed by Hans Wilhelm Kirchhof of Kassel who wrote in 1562 that the Jews raise fat geese and particularly love its liver. Some Rabbis were concerned with the kashrut complications of overfeeding geese because Jewish law prohibits the eating of an animal which cannot live for more than 12 months. It should be noted that the chasam sofer, Rabbi Moses Sofer held that even though the animal might die within 12 months, it does not constitute a treyf animal, because none of its limbs are damaged. This issue remained one of the most debated topics in Jewish dietary law until the Jewish taste for goose liver declined in the 19th century. Another kashrut issue, still problematic today, is that even properly slaughtered and inspected meat must be drained of its blood before being fit for consumption. This is usually done by salting ; however, liver being regarded as "(almost) wholly blood", the only way of kashering it is by broiling. Properly broiling a foie gras while preserving its delicate taste is a somewhat arduous endeavour in which few are willing to engage seriously.
Non-Jewish gastronomes began to appreciate the fattened goose liver which they could purchase in the Jewish ghetto. In 1570, Bartolomeo Scappi, chef to Pope Pius V, published his cookbook Opera in which he tells that "the liver of domestic goose raised by the Jews is of extreme size and weighs two and three pounds." In 1581, Marx Rumpolt of Mainz, chef to various German nobles, published the massive cookbook Kochbuch, telling that the Jews of Bohemia produced livers weighing over three pounds. Rumpolt gives several recipes for it, one of them being a mousse made out of the goose liver. János Keszei, chef to the court of the prince of Transylvania Michael Apafi, included recipes for foie gras in his A New Book About Cooking from 1680. He instructed readers to "envelop the goose liver in a calf's thin skin, bake it and prepare green or brown sauce to accompany it. I used goose liver fattened by Bohemian Jews, its weight was more than three pounds. You may also prepare a mush of it."
Main producers
France is the leading producer and consumer of foie gras. The country produced 18,450 tonnes of foie gras in 2005 (75% of estimated total world production of 23,500 tonnes) of which 96% was duck liver and the rest goose. Consumption of foie gras in France totalled 19,000 tonnes in 2005 . 30,000 people are involved in the industry with 90% residing in the Périgord (Dordogne) and Midi-Pyrénées régions in the southwest, as well as in the east (Alsace). The European Union recognizes the foie gras produced according to traditional farming methods (label rouge) in southwestern France with a geographical indication of provenance.
Hungary is the world's second-largest producer of foie gras and the largest exporter (the country exported 1,920 tonnes of goose foie gras in 2005). France is the principal market for Hungarian foie gras which is mainly exported raw. French companies spice, process or cook the foie gras so that it can be sold as a French product for the domestic market or for export . An estimated 30,000 Hungarian goose farmers are dependent on the foie gras industry .
Bulgaria produced 1,500 tonnes of foie gras in 2005 .
Québec also has a thriving foie gras industry. Many Canadian chefs use Québec foie gras as a demonstration of national pride.
Production methods
Ducks and geese are omnivorous, and like many birds, have very elastic throats which expand and allow them to store whole food, or large amounts of food, in the esophagus while awaiting digestion in the stomach. In the wild this dilation allows them to swallow large items, such as a whole fish, for a long digestive process. Wild geese may consume 300 grams of protein and another 800 grams of grasses per day. Farmed geese allowed to graze on carrots adapt to eat 100 grams of protein, but may consume up to 2½ kilograms of the carrots per day. A wild duck may double its weight in the autumn, storing fat throughout much of its body and especially on the liver. This weight gain is entirely reversible both in the wild and with farmed fowl used in foie gras production.
The geese or ducks used in foie gras production are initially free range, feeding on grasses that toughen the esophagus. While still free roaming they are gradually introduced to a high starch diet that by itself leads to about half of the enlarged liver's size. The next feeding phase, which the French call finition d'engraissement, or "completing the fattening process", involves forced daily ingestion of controlled amounts of feed for 12 to 15 days with ducks and for 15 to 18 days with geese. During this phase ducks are usually fed twice daily while geese are usually fed 3 times daily. In modern production, the animal recieves a controlled amount depending on the the stage of the process, the weight of the animal, and the amount it last ingested. Typically, at the start of production an animal might be fed 200 grams of food per day and up to 450 grams at its last meal. The feed is administered using a funnel fitted with a large tube (20 to 30 cm long) which forces the feed into the animal's esophagus. If using an auger system to drive the feed, the procedure takes about 45 to 60 seconds. If using a pneumatic system, the process takes about 2 to 3 seconds. Care is taken during the feeding process to ensure no damage to the esophagus occurs, which could cause injury or death in the animal.
Force feeding exploits a natural process through which geese and ducks store fat in their livers in preparation for winter migration. The feed, usually corn which is boiled with fat to facilitate ingestion, causes large amounts of fat to deposit in the liver producing the buttery consistency.
Geese used in foie gras production are generally Moullard geese. The ducks used are sterile hybrids: males of the species Cairina moschata are crossed with female domestic ducks (Anas platyrhynchos). These ducks are usually preferred to geese, as the carcass of a fattened duck is more valuable than that of a goose; other uses of ducks include popular dishes such as confit de canard (duck confit).
Presentation
Foie gras, in France, exists in some different legally-defined presentations, from the high-end to the low-end:
- foie gras entier (entire foie gras), made of one or two whole liver lobes; it can be cooked (cuit), semi-cooked (mi-cuit), or fresh (frais);
- foie gras, made of pieces of livers reassembled together;
- bloc de foie gras, a fully-cooked, molded block made of 98% or more foie gras; if termed avec morceaux ("with pieces"), it must contain at least 50% of pieces of foie gras for goose, and 30% for duck.
In addition, there exist pâté de foie gras, mousse de foie gras (both must be made with 50% or more of foie gras), parfait de foie gras (75% or more foie gras) and other preparations (no legal obligation).
Fully cooked preparations are generally sold in metallic or glass cans for long-term conservation. Whole fresh foie gras is not usually available, except in some producers' markets in the producing regions. Frozen whole foie gras are sometimes sold in French supermarkets.
French foie gras preparation is generally over low heat (terrine) as the traditional goose foie gras suffers from too much fat melt. The American palate, used to the more accessible duck foie gras, has more recipes and plate preparations that serve foie gras hot. The recent (in French culinary tradition) introduction of duck foie gras has resulted in some recipes crossing back from America to France. In Hungary goose foie gras is traditionally fried in goose fat, which is then poured over the foie gras and left to cool. It is also eaten warm after being fried or roasted, with some chefs smoking the foie gras over a cherry wood fire. In other parts of the world foie gras is served in exotic dishes such as foie gras sushi or alongside steak tartare.
Foie gras may be flavored with truffles or liquors such as armagnac. It is commonly served accompanied by crusty bread or toast. It is often served with a dessert wine such as Sauternes as the rich sweet flavours go well together, a classic example of wine and food matching. Some people, on the other hand, prefer it with a dry white wine, such as those from Alsace. Accompaniments may include onion jam.
Consumption
Foie gras is a luxury dish. Many in France only consume foie gras on special occasions, such as Christmas or New Year's Day eve réveillon dinners, though the recent increased availability of foie gras has made it a less exceptional dish. In some areas of France foie gras is a year round pleasure.
Duck foie gras is the cheaper and, since a change of production methods in the 1950s, by far the most common kind. The taste of duck foie gras is often referred to as musky with a subtle bitterness. Goose foie gras is noted for being less gamey and smoother.
Controversy
Many contend the method of feeding the geese and ducks to be forced and cruel. They use the term gavage, a French term for stuffed feeding (and a medical term for feeding those who can't feed themselves). After political pressure from organizations lobbying for animal rights, certain jurisdictions have banned gavage.
Most foie gras producers do not consider their methods cruel, insisting that it is a natural process exploiting the animals' natural features. Producers argue that wild ducks and geese naturally ingest large amounts of whole food and gain weight before migration. Foie gras producers also contend that geese and ducks do not have a gag reflex, and therefore do not find force feeding uncomfortable. Michael Ginor, owner of Hudson Valley Foie Gras and author of Foie Gras... A Passion, claims his birds come to him and says this is important because "a stressed or hurt bird won't eat and digest well or produce a foie gras."
Late in 2003, a French coalition of animal rights groups published the Proclamation for the Abolition of the Gavage, claiming that the practice of forced feeding is already illegal based on existing animal protection laws in France and the European Union. However, these laws leave much for interpretation. The Council of the European Union issued Council Directive 98/58/EC on 20 July 1998 concerning the protection of farm animals. It stipulates that animal "owners or keepers take all reasonable steps to ensure the welfare of animals under their care and to ensure that those animals are not caused any unnecessary pain, suffering or injury."
The Report of the EU Scientific Committee on Animal Health and Animal Welfare on Welfare Aspects of the Production of Foie Gras in Ducks and Geese, Adopted 16 December 1998 is an 89-page review of studies from several producing countries. It notes that animal death rates increase by a factor of ten to twenty during the two-week forced feeding period. Also, while the consequences of force feeding in birds are reversible, the "level of steatosis should be considered pathological." In humans, the accumulation of fat in the liver from consuming excess calories is called non alcoholic fatty liver (NAFLD). Progressive liver disease with inflammatory changes may develop called Nonalcoholic Steatohepatitis (NASH).
The EU report notes that continued force feeding leads to early death of the animal. It also recognizes that producers do not put their birds livers into a pathological state. The timing of liver fattening is carefully controlled so the animal is slaughtered before it becomes a health hazard. An animal that stops the forced feeding process returns to its normal weight. Producers, and the EU report, also answer the criticism of increased mortality by noting that the overall mortality rate of ducks and geese in foie gras production is much less than that of farm raised chickens and turkeys.
Some of the physiological claims by producers are contradicted by the EU report. In response to the gag reflex claim, the report states, "The oropharyngeal area is particularly sensitive and is physiologically adapted to perform a gag reflex in order to prevent fluids entering the trachea. Force feeding will have to overcome this reflex and hence the birds may initially find this distressing and injury may result." Some critics argue that the birds would be better served sedated before being fed. Others suggest surgically removing the liver from birds that have died of natural causes, and soaking them in a mixture of gelatine, alcohol, and buttermilk.
Industry groups including CIFOG, and researchers at INRA affirm that forced feeding is not a cruel procedure and even that animals appreciate this treatment. The EU committee carried out several tests designed to detect pain or distress by looking at blood hormones and all of them were inconclusive or without any measurable difference to similarly raised animals. The committee did not observe any signs that animals appreciated being force fed, and observed that ducks attempted to move away when their feeder entered the room. However, veterinarians who serve at foie gras farms have observed behavior which indicates the birds appreciate force feeding.
Some EU foie gras producers seek protection under a "cultural exception" clause similar to the protection of bullfighting in the south.
Foie gras is illegal in several locations, and legislation is pending in others. In August, 2003, the Supreme Court of Israel declared foie gras production to be animal cruelty, and made production illegal beginning in March, 2005. On September 29, 2004, California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger signed a law that will ban the production or sale of foie gras from force fed birds in the state by 2012. The law would allow foie gras produced by methods that are not considered animal cruelty. Similar legislation is pending in New York. California and New York are currently the only US states with foie gras industries. On April 26, 2006, the city council of Chicago voted to make Chicago the first city in the United States to ban foie gras .
Force feeding is prohibited in:
- Argentina
- Austria (six of nine provinces)
- The Czech Republic
- Denmark
- Finland
- Germany
- Ireland
- Israel (2005)
- Italy
- Luxembourg
- Norway
- Poland (1999 — was the world's fifth largest producer)
- Sweden
- Switzerland
- The Netherlands
- The United Kingdom
- United States: California's ban comes into effect in 2012
- United States: Chicago, IL
References
- Larousse Gastronomique, by Prosper Montagne (Ed.), Clarkson Potter, 2001. ISBN 0609609718
- The Oxford Companion to Food, by Alan Davidson, Oxford University Press. ISBN 0192115790
- Foie Gras: A Passion, by Michael A. Ginor, John Wiley & Sons, 1999. ISBN 0471293180
- What is Foie Gras?
- About the controversy on gavage:
- Campaigns against force-feeding
- GourmetCruelty.com: The Truth about Foie Gras (from a point of view that gavage is cruel to animals)
- Stopgavage Manifesto for the abolition of force-feeding (French site with pages in English)
- Stop Force-Feeding
- "Delicacy of Despair", PETA video on foie gras production
- Legal texts
- News reports
- Controversy in NY state surrounding Hudson Valley Foie Gras, the largest U.S. producer.
- Fox News story about California's anti-foie gras law
- Article regarding foie gras controversy in Chicago and local government attempts to stop sales of the delicacy in city restaurants
- Buzzle.com report on Israeli ruling
- A UK Independent article about the controversy
- Op-ed
- The Contrversy Over Foie Gras - Does a Duck have a Soul? How foie gras became the new fur.
- Scientific Studies
- Campaigns against force-feeding
- About preparation:
- Committee on Animal Health and Animal Welfare on Welfare Aspects of the Production of Foie Gras in Ducks and Geese, section 3.2
- Committee on Animal Health and Animal Welfare on Welfare Aspects of the Production of Foie Gras in Ducks and Geese, section 4