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BERLINGSKE TIDENDE's Sunday supplement M/S
November 21, 2004 By Kim Flyvbjerg
Europe is with Roe
The Russians have ruined the market for themselves, the Iranians maintain
the style as the world's most distinguished, but the future for caviare
is in Europe. While wild sturgeon is threatened in the Caspian Sea, European
sturgeon farms have produced a brilliant alternative in later years. M/S
has visited one of them near Bordeaux.
Small evil eyes, a V-shaped snout with thick whiskers, hanging
down over the mouth, and a dorsal fin, which in fits baskes from side
to side and creates a circular movement around two young Frenchmen in
wet suits.
The sturgeon looks like a shark. Inside as well, since the sturgeon, like
the shark, has no bones, but a skeleton of cartilage. The famous Beluga
sturgeon from the Caspian Sea may become more than 100 years of age, reach
a length of nine meters and weigh upwards of one and half tonnes. In France
the farmed Baerii sturgeons seldom reach an age of more than ten years
and a weight of eight to fifteen kilos.. Yet it is a fish capable of throwing
a man to the floor, if one hasn't the right grip. The young Frenchmen
stand in matte, greenish water to the waist.
When they lift the smooth, black-grey torpedoes out of the water, the
fish writhe and slam the wet suits.
We are at a sturgeon farm an hour's drive from Bordeaux.
The area is flat and in size like 3-4 football fields. The sky is gray,
the grass dark green and wet. It is late September, and in the near distance
a flock of gulls and a single grey heron fly around. The thought that
180 tonnes of sturgeon swim in the low water basins, almost loads the
air with electricity, as if we were underneath crackling pylons.
The sturgeons are eased up on land, brought under a ceiling of tarpaulin,
where a group of elder men takes over. With a scanner some of them search
the fish, as they were a pregnant woman, while others dutifully note
their results in notebooks. They note their sex, and the males are sorted
out - most are sent to slaughter, others
sold to put & take, while a few are saved for further rearing. The
females are discovered by the scanner, which sends small pin pricks up
on a black and white monitor.
Those are the pin pricks it is all about. The sought-after roe, which,
like nothing else has become synonymous with old European gastronomic
decadence. Not coloured lump-sucker roe. Not avruga, which might sound
authentic, but is simply herring meat rolled into small balls and coloured
black. Not caviare, genuine caviare.
THE COMPANY IS NAMED STURGEON and the product Baerii/Caviare de
France. It is imported by Rossini Caviar, Scandinavia's largest importer
of genuine caviare with a yearly sale on the right side of 200 kiloes
in Denmark alone. Managing director Jacob Marsing-Rossini has chosen
to completely bypass the earlier, so prestigious Russian caviare because
of its quality variations. He finds that that the French caviare is an
excellent alternative to Iranian caviare - the price of which has nearly
doubled this year. He offers both types, but at several blind testings
it has been ascertained that even experts find it difficult to distinguish
between French farmed caviare and Iranian caviare from wild sturgeons
in the Caspian Sea.
The sturgeon farm lies in St. Fort sur Gironde. The Gironde river runs
through this area on its way from Bordeaux to the Atlantic ocean, or perhaps
it is the other way round. In olden days there were wild sturgeons in
the river, and a production of French caviare started up at the beginning
of the 19th century. Production stopped after the Second World War as
a consequence of changes in the environment and over-fishing, and in 1980
the last sturgeon was caught in the river.
Even if the Baerii sturgeon so far has made it on this planet in 300 million
years and is doing well on the farms in France - in spite of the fact
that it stems from the cold Siberia - yes, most do not believe that setting
it out in the Gironde again will be successful and create a new wild stock.
However, it stands to reason that caviare is a firmly
established part of French gastronomy. The French eat 15% of the world
production, making them the world's biggest purchaser. The company Sturgeon
is considered one of Europe's biggest producers, but there are also farming
in a.o. Italy, Germany and Bulgaria. The farm in St. Fort sur Gironde
is one of Sturgeons three farms.
PRESENT ON THIS DAY is also the managing director, an English
farmer by the name of Allan Jones. A large graying man in his fifties,
who undoubtedly would be a Range Rover, were he a car. As a young man
he wrote a doctoral dissertation about farming of turbot and was one of
the pioneers in this field together with farming of bass. But when, as
director of the international fishing company, Stolt Sea Farm, he was
asked to leave France for a position in Spain, the love of La France was
too big. He saw how the amount of wild caviare was falling because of
over- fishing in the Caspian Sea and he envisaged a market.
So then he went solo and teamed up with a French family in 1995. Together
they invested in closed trout farms and centers for hatching and rearing
of infant fish fry and at the same took over a large stock of sturgeons
at about 100 tonnes. They were reared for the purpose of selling the meat,
but this Allan Jones was not interested in. The three to four year old
fish halved the waiting time until he could supply caviare, so that he
need not farm fish for seven to eight years before money came into the
till. In 1999 Sturgeon sent their first two tonnes to the trade, and this
year they will reach seven and a half tonnes; the aim is fifteen tonnes
within a few years.
Allan Jones also tries to sell the meat of the sturgeons - according to
Gastronomical Encyclopedia it is well suited for smoking - but he thinks
that it might also have a potential as fresh meat sold at fishmongers.
It can be treated as calves meat, and it is in fact fish of this type
that is so very popular with Danish fishmongers, i.e. fish without bones,
and which does not taste too much of fish, similar to tuna, marlin, you
name it.
NOT RAR FROM THE STURGEON FARM lies the slaughter house.
It isn't a particularly glamorous place. From the outside it looks like
a place, where one could just as well weld transistors or cast wash basins.
But in truth one produces caviare at 1000 Euro the kilo The sturgeon is
slaughtered in the spring and the fall.
The living fish are transported in basins from the farm to the slaughterhouse.
Here they are hung on a meat hook through the head on a railing in a sterile
room with red and blue plastic buckets and curtains of thick transparent
plastic. Dressed in overalls with blue hairnets and paper napkins on the
mouth, the slaughteres take down the sturgeons one by one and armed with
thin, sharp knives and steelmesh gloves they slap the fish onto a table
of
stainless steel, hose it down, and make a cut in the belly from the head
towards the tail. There is plenty of black roe in the belly of the fish,
and together with buttery placenta about one and a half kilo of caviare
is dumped into a plastic bowl. There never was anything romantic about
slaughter.
In an adjoining room a woman registers every fish, so that each tin can
be traced to the individual fish. With pinchers and ruler she controls
that the eggs have the required minimum size which is 2,5 millimeters.
In the same room
a young worker strain the roe over a soft sieve to rid the roe of the
worst impurity. Another takes care of further cleansing. And then lie
the large roes in plastic bowls on ice and for the first time they remind
one of the end result in the small golden tins.
If one has ever picked green nuts from a hazel bush and eaten the yet
not ripe, white nut, one has a good impression of how clean caviare tastes.
But the taste of salt is lacking. Salt is added in the last room, following
which the caviare is packed.. After fourteen days in tins, salt and egg
combine and the caviare may be eaten. From then on and up to the sell-by
date about three months later the caviare gradually becomes stronger,
but also more watery as egg and salt merge. In genuine caviare there are
no additives, no pasteurisation, no hokus pokus at all. As in so many
ways, the simple is the best.
Many also feel that caviare is best enjoyed au natural - an if one has
seen the Italian beauty Monica Belluci pose naked in Esquire, only covered
by a thin layer of Beluga, one is inclined to just eat it from the tin.
Never the less we drive to St. Emilion, where the grapes hang heavy on
the vine ready to be harvested the following week. Not far from the famous
Chateau Petrus, in the sandstone built center of St. Emilion, Philippe
Etchebest
has prepared a menue of caviare at the Hôtel Le Plaisance. He serves
the black grains together with smoked salmon, pink calf, tails of Norway
lobster and even cheese. In some of the causes they are the luxurious,
but superfluous addition, in the best cases the very special salty taste
of the caviare is used to complete the cause. Only the desert is not created
with caviare, but there should be no hindrance for completing the meal
with the black grains - the gastronomical inventor Heston Blumenthal from
the Fat Ducks' recent combination of white chocolate and caviare has been
widely copied throughout the world and is already considered a modern
classic.
-Caviare originally comes from different wild types of sturgeon
in the Caspian Sea, the world's largest lake.
-Russia borders on the Sea and started a production of caviare
in the 1920ies. After the fall of the Soviet Union the good reputation
of Russian caviare was shattered, and to-day 90 % of the production is
probably illegal. Iran too borders on the Sea and in 1950 came onto the
market. Their caviare is considered the World's finest.
-The wild sturgeon is threatened by over-fishing, and from certain
quarters it is suggested to completely stop fishing for a period. So far
there has been a fall in the catch from 400 tonnes in 1950 to 140 tonnes
in 2003. This year a catch of 70 tonnes is expected.
-Caviare from the Caspian Sea come from Oscietre (95%), Acipenser
Gueldenstaedti, Sevruga (4,5%), Acipenser Stellatus and the almost unobtainable
Beluga (0,5%) from the strain Huso huso.
-The caviare from the French sturgeon farms is called Baerii and
comes from Acipenser Baerii, a sturgeon type stemming from Siberia. The
French are trying to get permission to also produce Oscietre caviare.
-Cites, which regulates and control quota of caviare, has decided
to reduce the amount of sturgeon to be caught in the Caspian Sea. Where
last year marketing of 80 tonnes was allowed prior to Christmas, this
year only 30 tonnes is freed. Shilat (the Iranian State Agency) therefore
decided to raise prices by an average of 93%. French Baerii caviare (caviar
de France) costs from 349 Dkr./30 grammes, and the cheapest Iranian, Sevruga,
costs from 795 Dkr./30 grammes.
-In Denmark Rossini Caviar market all four types. Read more on
www.rossinicaviar.com
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