Entry tags:
What to eat?
Went out for a meal last night with the morris team. Lovely meal, good food, great atmosphere, good company. Hard to better that.
Only one very small fly in the ointment: My starter was a duck terrine, which was excellent. There was something in it, the occasional teaspoon size lump of something creamy and stunningly delicious. Like liver, but very mild and with a hint of mushroom and a flavour I'd never encountered before but really liked. Curious, I asked the waiter afterwards if he could tell me what it was. He said it was the fois gras.
Rats. That sadly means that I'll probably never taste it again. Fois gras is on my list of foods that I avoid for ethical reasons. (It's produced by force-feeding geese - though I gather there is a more expensive version that produces limited seasonal quantities by killing geese that have fattened themselves just before migrating).
Ah well - at least I have some understanding of why gourmets fight so hard to continue eating it. I disagree with them, but at least I know where they are coming from.
For those who may be curious, other foods I avoid include veal (cruelty in production), skate (badly over-fished), eggs that aren't free range (I try and get organic as the welfare standard is higher than for free-range) and pretty much any fish that is a top predator (all over-fished and with slow reproduction rates).
Only one very small fly in the ointment: My starter was a duck terrine, which was excellent. There was something in it, the occasional teaspoon size lump of something creamy and stunningly delicious. Like liver, but very mild and with a hint of mushroom and a flavour I'd never encountered before but really liked. Curious, I asked the waiter afterwards if he could tell me what it was. He said it was the fois gras.
Rats. That sadly means that I'll probably never taste it again. Fois gras is on my list of foods that I avoid for ethical reasons. (It's produced by force-feeding geese - though I gather there is a more expensive version that produces limited seasonal quantities by killing geese that have fattened themselves just before migrating).
Ah well - at least I have some understanding of why gourmets fight so hard to continue eating it. I disagree with them, but at least I know where they are coming from.
For those who may be curious, other foods I avoid include veal (cruelty in production), skate (badly over-fished), eggs that aren't free range (I try and get organic as the welfare standard is higher than for free-range) and pretty much any fish that is a top predator (all over-fished and with slow reproduction rates).

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I don't eat much meat; for most of my formative years our meals were mostly vegetarian with chicken or fish once a week at the most and I still prefer this. Organic meat/fish/poultry once a week is infinitely more enjoyable than tasteless mass produced meat every day.
I also avoid food with high food miles, but it's more for selfish taste reasons :)
Vegetable aim: buy local, buy organic.
Meat aim: buy humanely killed, buy local, buy organic.
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I use an organic box for veg - excellent value (and they never air freight and try to UK source whenever they can).
I think you're doing all the high Brownie point things. Way to go!
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Ban 'em all.