As a healthfood scare, horses have done the full circuit this past few
months. In Europe horsemeat has been found in hamburgers being routinely tested
in Ireland .
In response, supermarkets in the U.K. ,
France , Germany , Sweden
and Norway
suddenly dumped huge quantities of frozen lasagne and burgers and other
prepared meats.
Then Ikea meatballs were found to also contain horse - leading to their
withdrawal from stores in 21 countries. Some may even remember in 1981 when
Australian burgers sold in America
were found to contain horse, and the whole meat trade was jeopardised for a
time.
Well I'd like to ask a question. What is so wrong with eating horse? Now
let me quickly point out that I have no desire for it myself. But I am very
familiar, on my travels, to strolling up cobbled streets in Italy or China , past modern butcher shops
with big pictures of horses on the windows. In fact, in much of the world it is
regarded as a gourmet meat.
What brought this to mind was last week's Marketeer about 3D
printers eventually producing printed "meat" for us to eat. (I've had
a couple of queries: was this a send-up or was it true? Yes, it's the truth.)
So apart from manufacturing meat, what other possibilities do we have
for a future with an ever-growing world population and the human body's continuing
demand for protein?
Now this is the unpopular bit. There are a great many good sources of
food and protein that go to waste for purely emotional reasons, in this very
country. Think of the thousands of kangaroos that need to be culled each year;
the rabbits to eradicate; the camels wreaking havoc in the central Australian
deserts. All much-appreciated meats in different corners of the world, just not
ours.
This is where marketing can weave its magic spell. As it has been doing
so for centuries. Think about the way so many of our most popular meats have
been disguised through the power of language. It's not a sheep's leg you're
eating but braised mutton. Not pig chops but pork medallions. Not burned cow's
buttock but roast beef with the trimmings.
We have William the Conqueror to thank for this, bringing fine French
phrases to the kitchen while leaving the angle-saxon farmers sloshing in the
muck. An early piece of marketing that endures to this day.
Perhaps we can do the same with a new generation of foods. Pastissada
di caval does sound much nicer than horsemeat stew. Canada has grown increasingly fond of its
gourmet gee-gees, explained by Toronto
chef Grant van Gameren: AI call
horsemeat cotton candy,@ he says. AIt melts in
the mouth.@ There's a
Horse Meat Recipe Exchange on Facebook - and scores of other enthusiastic
cookery sites.
Our kangaroos are now exported to 55 countries worldwide. Certainly
there is still much controversy against the harvesting of kangaroos. But some
species are in excess and need control, agree groups like the Ecological
Society of Australia and the Australasian Wildlife Management Society.
They also argue that we should base more of our agriculture on native
animals rather than introduced livestock. This would then protect our fragile,
thin Australian soils from the damage they continue to suffer from the hooves
of sheep and cows.
So let's get a host of our animals off the "contaminated
meats" list and into the pot, through some smart legislation - and clever
marketing. Come on, Marketeers, any ideas?
How about ravioli cavallo? Or kangaburger. Fancy hot
possum pot? Or how about a basted Christmas emu? Or a feast around a
beach-baked hungi wombat? Who ever said Australia doesn't have its own
cuisine?
1 comment:
I think the more popular dish here is ratatuille!
Sherrill Sellman, N.D.
Tulsa, Oklahoma
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