Just last night I went to Senses, newly made over as a customer-friendly boite and with pleasingly idiosyncratic menu by Patrick Lin, and ate foie gras three ways, sauteed, poached and a little bloc of terrine. All of them slipped down like silk. How much longer will I be able to eat foie gras as animal power grows. I just hope Canada driven by Quebec resists the efforts of the animal activists to have the supreme gourmet dish banned. Foie gras is now banned in Germany, Israel, Poland, Norway, Chicago and California, all places the true foodie should avoid. Leading supermarkets in Britain don't carry it either but specialty stores do.
Now comes word that the Prince of Wales after a chat with the snowdrops decided he would give up foie gras, and in a churlish unneighbourly act, he's removing the royal warrant from a local shop House of Cheese which sells foie gras to eager buyers.
Wonder if the House of Cheese will retaliate by refusing to stock the Prince's own overpriced and high calorie brand Duchy Originals. Beats me how the prince can't produce as good a chocolate and fresh ginger biscuit as the cheaper Marks and Spencer brand.
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Thursday, February 28
by
Gina Mallet
on Thu 28 Feb 2008 07:00 AM EST
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PRAISE FOR LAST CHANCE TO EAT, The Fate of Taste in a Fast Food World Gina Mallet is right about absolutely everything. Part explanation, part memoir, part manifesto, Last Chance to Eat explains where it all went wrong - and what we can do about it. An invaluable antidote to the dark forces who want to deprive us of the good stuff..... Anthony Bourdain, author of Kitchen Confidential. This Month
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