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Caviar for the masses? China wants everyone to buy it!

waz

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Saw this news item on Sky News today and I was incredibly impressed. Bare in mind China had no Caviar industry for 15 years, and now is starting to dominate.
This is what I've always said about Pakistan i.e. if it got its act together regarding food production they would increase their exports manyfold.
Anyway, well done China.
There is a video in the link, which is well worth watching.


Caviar for the masses? China certainly thinks so
The largest caviar maker in the world wants "normal people" to try the expensive delicacy.


Caviar was the traditional delicacy of the Caspian Sea but these days production has a new headquarters: China.

Qiandao (Thousand Island) lake lies 220 miles south of Shanghai. Fringed with mountains, it is a popular holiday spot for Chinese residents fleeing the summer heat of the city.


But it is also home to Kaluga Queen, the biggest caviar maker in the world, responsible for a third of global production.

The sturgeon are kept in floating pens in a corner of Qiandao lake in eastern China


Their caviar ends up everywhere. The company says their eggs have graced the tables of both Queen Elizabeth and Kim Jong Un.
Kaluga Queen plans to go public next year at a valuation of around £600m, the company told Sky News.



"In the beginning, people were surprised because: caviar, from China?" Han Lei, vice general manager of Kaluga Queen, said.


"They never heard about caviar from China. They had many doubts about the quality. About the safety.

"Today, we supply 25 countries and we work with around 100 distributors around the world."


The company was set up by officials from the Chinese ministry of agriculture, who started building their first farm in 2003.

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It was good timing. In 2005, the US banned imports of beluga caviar from sturgeon caught in the Caspian sea because of fears overfishing would wipe out the species.

Farmed caviar is not subject to those restrictions.

"In 2006, we produced the first tins of farmed caviar from China," Mr Han said. "And after that we grew every year."

In a corner of the waters of Qiandao, floating metal and net structures pen in more than 1,000 sturgeon.

Some are up to two metres long and worth as much as a Ferrari, Mr Han said, because of the value of the eggs they carry.

After about four years in the lake, the sturgeon are taken to these inland pools where they live for at least another four years

Image:After about four years in the lake, the sturgeon are taken to these inland pools where they live for at least another four years
Different breeds of sturgeon spend four or so years in the lake before they are transported to pools on land.

"We feed them and watch them growing from baby fish to a mature fish," Deny Yun, who manages the farm, told Sky News.

"We feel heart-broken when sending them to factory. But as a company, we have to do so. We must suffer this."

Once they are mature - at least eight years old but for some breeds as old as 15 - the sturgeon are taken to the processing factory.

The eggs are taken out of the sturgeon when they are at least eight years old

Image:The eggs are taken out of the sturgeon when they are at least eight years old

They are cut open still alive and the eggs are extracted before the sturgeon is killed and the rest of its body used for meat.

The eggs are cleaned, sorted and salted before they are tinned - a process that takes 15 minutes from start to finish.

Most of Kaluga Queen's caviar is sold under different brands abroad - in the UK it is sold through King's Fine Food, which is on sale at Fortnum and Mason's and Harrods.

But it also supplies customers in China using its own branding. And China is getting an appetite for the stuff.


The eggs are cleaned, sorted and salted then tinned

Image:The eggs are cleaned, sorted and salted then tinned


Prices start at 500 RMB (around £57) for 50g, going up to 9,000 RMB (£1,024) for a 50g tin of beluga caviar.

"We did a lot of promotion to introduce the caviar culture to Chinese people," Mr Han said.

"Now, more and more people start to consume caviar, to like caviar, to be caviar fans.

"The domestic market is growing very fast. After the virus is well controlled by the government, they're going to restaurants more.

"And more and more people like to enjoy the caviar."


That is helping to make up the shortfall in international orders as a result of COVID-19.

Deng Yun manages the farm which has more than 1,000 sturgeon

Image:Deng Yun manages the farm which has more than 1,000 sturgeon
Kaluga produced 20% less caviar this year, although it aims to make up that deficit in 2021.

And there is a lot of room for growth. Current global production of caviar, from all producers, is around 300 tonnes.

In the heyday of the free-spending, status-flaunting 1980s, production peaked at 1,000 tonnes.

Mr Han said Kaluga Queen wants "normal people to have the chance to try caviar".

"In this way we can meet the demand all over the world," he added.


 
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Darwinian Awards were made for this scenario.

Imagine wanting to eat Chinese caviar in the middle of the Wuhan pandemic.

Cheers, Doc
 
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Darwinian Awards were made for this scenario.

Imagine wanting to eat Chinese caviar in the middle of the Wuhan pandemic.

Cheers, Doc
It's surprising that India is in an economic depression given its bountiful harvest of sour grapes. The crop is especially bitter this year. 2020 will be a sought-after vintage for fine whine connoisseurs.
 
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It's surprising that India is in an economic depression given its bountiful harvest of sour grapes. The crop is especially bitter this year. 2020 will be a sought-after vintage for fine whine connoisseurs.

Nice.
 
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Speaking of China and fish exports ...

Have you guys read about the disgusting Bassa fish and how (and where) its grown?

The same slimy jelly like flesh Chinese restaurants use in their crispy friend fish dishes.

Read and educate yourselves.

Cheers, Doc
Bassa fish is made in Vietnam. Vietnam's famous food.

Considering the Indian virus pandemic. Friendly relations with India and Vietnam. India should not import Bassa fish? Think about cow dung with Bassa fish. Indians would love it.

Congratulations on India's 400 million illiterates learning to read and receiving basic education. :tup:

Cheers, Doc
 
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Bollocks.

It's cultivated in sewage water of a billion Chinese potty holes.

This is fact. The documentaries a few years back were legend.

Lol I loved the look on the yuppy faces man .... bassa basssa bassa!

Cheers, Doc
Ah. Consider the 400 million illiterates in India. 600 million people don't have toilets. GDP per capita is only 1800 USD. Vietnam is far ahead. Why do you want to deprive Vietnam of Bassa fish?

Calm down. Accept the facts. Countless Vietnamese have posted videos on YouTube proving that Bassa fish belongs to Vietnam. Just like cow dung belongs only to India. But Vietnam is still far ahead of India.

Cheers, Doc
 
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Ah. Consider the 400 million illiterates in India. 600 million people don't have toilets. GDP per capita is only 1800 USD. Vietnam is far ahead. Why do you want to deprive Vietnam of Bassa fish?

Calm down. Accept the facts. Countless Vietnamese have posted videos on YouTube proving that Bassa fish belongs to Vietnam. Just like cow dung belongs only to India. But Vietnam is still far ahead of India.

Cheers, Doc

Bollocks.

It's cultivated on a pan global industrial scale in giant sewage water farms in China.

Doesn't matter where the fish is native to or comes from.

It reaches plates across the world from that Chinese potty water.

Cheers, Doc
 
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Bollocks.

It's cultivated in sewage water of a billion Chinese potty holes.

This is fact. The documentaries a few years back were legend.

Lol I loved the look on the yuppy faces man .... bassa basssa bassa!

Cheers, Doc
Oh. Btw. Although Vietnamese eat Bassa fish. Vietnam's per capita GDP is still at least 10 years ahead of cow dung eating India.

cheers doc
 
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