Monday, January 31, 2011

Hamper

I made a small hamper for Lim and Yap consist of:
1. Sugee biscuits
2.Pineapple tart
3.Ground nuts
4.Lemon cheese cupcake

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Foie gras

I often watched AFC channel and came across this delicacy.
Daniel Boulud makes something very delicious from it.

Boulud burger- the most expensive burger


Makes me curious to know what it is.
Little did I know, they were force feed using some brutal method.

This is what I get from Wikipedia about foie gras: 

Foie gras (pronounced /fwɑːˈɡrɑː/ in English; French for "fat liver") is a food product made of the liver of a duck or goose that has been specially fattened. This fattening is typically achieved through gavage (force-feeding) corn, according to French law, though outside of France it is occasionally produced using natural feeding. Pâté de foie gras was formerly known as "Strasbourg pie" in English due to that city being a major producer of this food product

This is how foie gras looks like:



This is how the goose was fed to ensure their liver grows bigger! Cruel isn't it!

Force-Feeding
Birds raised for foie gras spend the first four weeks of their lives eating and growing, sometimes in semi-darkness. For the next four weeks, they are confined to cages and fed a high-protein, high-starch diet that is designed to promote rapid growth. Force-feeding begins when the birds are between 8 and 10 weeks old. For 12 to 21 days, ducks and geese are subjected to gavage—every day, up to 4 pounds of grain and fat are forced down the birds’ throats by means of an auger in a feeding tube.(9,10) The Washington Post reported that the tube “is pushed 5 inches down their throats, and more food than they want is gunned into their stomachs. If the mushy corn sticks … a stick is sometimes used to force it down.”(11) The birds’ livers, which become engorged from a carbohydrate-rich diet, can grow to be more than 10 times their normal size (a disease called “hepatic steatosis”).(12) The mortality rate of birds raised for foie gras has been found to be as much as 20 times higher than that of birds raised normally, and carcasses show wing fractures and severe tissue damage to the throat muscles.(13)
Read more here
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