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http://www.telegraphindia.com/1071209/asp/7days/story_8646836.asp

Sunday, December 09, 2007

The emu has landed

This Christmas, many a dinner table will see the customary roast chicken or

pork being replaced by the ostrich's distant cousin, the emu. *Reena Martins

* samples this culinary delight

 

On his farm in Wada Taluka along Mumbai's outskirts, Deepak Gonsalves has

kept aside a dozen of his 90 emus to be slaughtered for Christmas. Most of

the demand comes from the neighbouring villages in Vasai.

 

For long years, the emu was merely known as a bird that was to be found in

Australia, and occasionally in a crossword. These days, it is found in Vasai

kitchens — grilled, baked or cooked with *masalas*. Emu farming has caught

on — though mostly in Maharashtra and Andhra Pradesh — and the bird is being

eaten with relish, despite the fact that it's more expensive than its puny

kin, the chicken. And while few may have actually seen this flightless bird

walk six feet tall, in shaggy brownish-black plumage, a great many people

have begun to see it in *dhabas* and hotels.

 

In Wardha, emu farmer Shirish Ghode, who retired as assistant director,

public health, says he's set aside 100 emus to be slaughtered this season.

" They're all booked, " he says. Emu farmers such as Gonsalves and Bhadresh

Mehta in Pune and Jegan Mohan in Kodaikanal supply their local restaurants

with two to three emus a week. Vasai restaurateur Anil Machado points out

that the supply can't meet the demand, and clients often go back

disappointed.

 

Maharashtra — emu farming started in the Sharad Pawar stronghold, Baramati,

some years ago — got a boost in 2004 when the National Bank for Agriculture

and Rural Development offered interest-free loans of up to Rs 15 lakh to emu

farmers. Pawar's daughter, Supriya Sule, is among those promoting emu

farming as an income generation scheme, with help from the State Bank of

India, for women in Solapur. Within the next five years, the country hopes

to achieve a target of 10 lakh emus.

 

For the farmer, emu spells money — Mehta of Pune says a farm can yield 200

per cent of the investment within two years. The meat of one bird fetches a

farmer Rs 5,000-7,000, while its fat (22-25 per cent of its weight), used as

a therapeutic oil, brings in up to Rs 10,000. A slaughtered emu yields more

than twice as much as a live bird, as there's money to be made from the

meat, fat, bones, skin and feathers. Mehta says he recently sold a pair of

15-month-old emus for Rs 43,000. An 18-month-old bird would cost Rs

15,000-20,000, and a kilo of meat is for Rs 300-350.

 

While its dark green, leathery textured coconut-shaped eggs fetch around Rs

1,000 in the breeders' market, those that get cracked on the rocky terrain

of Gonsalves's farm, on being laid, cost about Rs 300 each. A single such

egg can be whipped into an omelette fit to feed five big eaters. The emu's

USP — apart from the novelty factor — is its low fat and high protein meat.

The website of the American Heart Association says lean cuts of emu are very

low in total fat, saturated fat, cholesterol and sodium.

 

That is possibly the reason the Indian Army plans to serve emu meat to its

troops. Seven months ago, the army bought several 15-month-old birds from

Mehta's Pune farm, to be reared on an army farmland in Ghaziabad. A similar

plan by the Army Sports Institute in Pune, however, was dropped because of

the high costs involved.

 

Unlike its feathered friends, emu falls in the red meat category. " Emu meat

is redder than that of the ostrich, but it does taste similar, " says Vasai

veterinary surgeon Bonny Pereira. The taste, he adds, is also close to

turkey and peacock meat.

 

Celebrity chef Sanjeev Kapoor points out that emu meat is hard, like beef,

and is best cooked after several hours of marination. " Wrongly cooked emu

and beef taste similar, " says Kapoor. On his farm, Gonsalves proudly holds a

red, sinewy thigh of a slaughtered emu, to be marinated for an entire day in

curd and spices, and roasted whole in a wood-fired oven.

*MEATY ISSUE:* Deepak Gonsalves at his emu farm on the outskirts of

Mumbai. Pix: Sanjit Kundu

 

Last week, when Kiran Patil, chef at Post 91, a Pune restaurant, introduced

*tandoori *emu* boti *kabab to the menu, several guests, he says, mistook it

for mutton. " It was tender, from day-long marination, " he says.

 

The best meat, farmers say, comes from 18 to 24-month-old emus. And while

the older birds yield more fat, the meat is tougher. Birds slaughtered

during the mating period in winter tend to be leaner, as they eat roughly

half their regular quota of about a kilo of oil seeds, leaves and formula

food a day.

 

Though the fat in emu meat itself may be very low, a single 18-month-old

bird, weighing up to 45 kg, yields 8-12 kg fat. Until lately, that's mostly

what emu farmers were focused on. " I used to bury the meat after

slaughtering an emu for its fat which is processed into oil for joint

pains, " says Mehta.

 

The emu, clearly, is being tarted up to suit India's palate. Toni da Dhaba,

off the Mumbai-Pune highway, serves emu *handi* for Rs 450 a plate. Machado

says he's priced a dish of 250 gm of curried emu at Rs 125. Ananda Solomon,

the executive chef of the Taj President in Mumbai, however, says he is

waiting for the demand to present itself. " If we're forced to, we will serve

emu, " he says.

 

On the other hand, Toni da Dhaba, which has been serving emu meat for the

last four years, can't have enough of it. The bird is so sought after that

there's an open pen with a flock of emus fluttering around in it. And

leaving nothing to the imagination, there is a board there that says: " *Yahi

hai emu* (this is the emu). "

 

 

 

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bernie

Monday, December 10, 2007 1:06 PM

Re: Emu farms in India

 

 

Dear Ma'am,

I have the same question. Maybe you can post your query on

AAPN. Best wishes,

 

 

 

On 12/10/07, bernie <berniew wrote:

How are these birds killed.does anyone know?

Bernie Wright.

-

" " < journalistandanimals

<aapn >

Monday, December 10, 2007 7:33 AM

Emu farms in India

 

 

http://www.telegraphindia.com/1071209/asp/7days/story_8646836.asp

Sunday, December 09, 2007

The emu has landed

This Christmas, many a dinner table will see the customary roast chicken or

pork being replaced by the ostrich's distant cousin, the emu. *Reena Martins

* samples this culinary delight

 

On his farm in Wada Taluka along Mumbai's outskirts, Deepak Gonsalves has

kept aside a dozen of his 90 emus to be slaughtered for Christmas. Most of

the demand comes from the neighbouring villages in Vasai.

 

For long years, the emu was merely known as a bird that was to be found in

Australia, and occasionally in a crossword. These days, it is found in Vasai

kitchens — grilled, baked or cooked with *masalas*. Emu farming has caught

on — though mostly in Maharashtra and Andhra Pradesh — and the bird is being

eaten with relish, despite the fact that it's more expensive than its puny

kin, the chicken. And while few may have actually seen this flightless bird

walk six feet tall, in shaggy brownish-black plumage, a great many people

have begun to see it in *dhabas* and hotels.

 

In Wardha, emu farmer Shirish Ghode, who retired as assistant director,

public health, says he's set aside 100 emus to be slaughtered this season.

" They're all booked, " he says. Emu farmers such as Gonsalves and Bhadresh

Mehta in Pune and Jegan Mohan in Kodaikanal supply their local restaurants

with two to three emus a week. Vasai restaurateur Anil Machado points out

that the supply can't meet the demand, and clients often go back

disappointed.

 

Maharashtra — emu farming started in the Sharad Pawar stronghold, Baramati,

some years ago — got a boost in 2004 when the National Bank for Agriculture

and Rural Development offered interest-free loans of up to Rs 15 lakh to emu

farmers. Pawar's daughter, Supriya Sule, is among those promoting emu

farming as an income generation scheme, with help from the State Bank of

India, for women in Solapur. Within the next five years, the country hopes

to achieve a target of 10 lakh emus.

 

For the farmer, emu spells money — Mehta of Pune says a farm can yield 200

per cent of the investment within two years. The meat of one bird fetches a

farmer Rs 5,000-7,000, while its fat (22-25 per cent of its weight), used as

a therapeutic oil, brings in up to Rs 10,000. A slaughtered emu yields more

than twice as much as a live bird, as there's money to be made from the

meat, fat, bones, skin and feathers. Mehta says he recently sold a pair of

15-month-old emus for Rs 43,000. An 18-month-old bird would cost Rs

15,000-20,000, and a kilo of meat is for Rs 300-350.

 

While its dark green, leathery textured coconut-shaped eggs fetch around Rs

1,000 in the breeders' market, those that get cracked on the rocky terrain

of Gonsalves's farm, on being laid, cost about Rs 300 each. A single such

egg can be whipped into an omelette fit to feed five big eaters. The emu's

USP — apart from the novelty factor — is its low fat and high protein meat.

The website of the American Heart Association says lean cuts of emu are very

low in total fat, saturated fat, cholesterol and sodium.

 

That is possibly the reason the Indian Army plans to serve emu meat to its

troops. Seven months ago, the army bought several 15-month-old birds from

Mehta's Pune farm, to be reared on an army farmland in Ghaziabad. A similar

plan by the Army Sports Institute in Pune, however, was dropped because of

the high costs involved.

 

Unlike its feathered friends, emu falls in the red meat category. " Emu meat

is redder than that of the ostrich, but it does taste similar, " says Vasai

veterinary surgeon Bonny Pereira. The taste, he adds, is also close to

turkey and peacock meat.

 

Celebrity chef Sanjeev Kapoor points out that emu meat is hard, like beef,

and is best cooked after several hours of marination. " Wrongly cooked emu

and beef taste similar, " says Kapoor. On his farm, Gonsalves proudly holds a

red, sinewy thigh of a slaughtered emu, to be marinated for an entire day in

curd and spices, and roasted whole in a wood-fired oven.

*MEATY ISSUE:* Deepak Gonsalves at his emu farm on the outskirts of

Mumbai. Pix: Sanjit Kundu

 

Last week, when Kiran Patil, chef at Post 91, a Pune restaurant, introduced

*tandoori *emu* boti *kabab to the menu, several guests, he says, mistook it

for mutton. " It was tender, from day-long marination, " he says.

 

The best meat, farmers say, comes from 18 to 24-month-old emus. And while

the older birds yield more fat, the meat is tougher. Birds slaughtered

during the mating period in winter tend to be leaner, as they eat roughly

half their regular quota of about a kilo of oil seeds, leaves and formula

food a day.

 

Though the fat in emu meat itself may be very low, a single 18-month-old

bird, weighing up to 45 kg, yields 8-12 kg fat. Until lately, that's mostly

what emu farmers were focused on. " I used to bury the meat after

slaughtering an emu for its fat which is processed into oil for joint

pains, " says Mehta.

 

The emu, clearly, is being tarted up to suit India's palate. Toni da Dhaba,

off the Mumbai-Pune highway, serves emu *handi* for Rs 450 a plate. Machado

says he's priced a dish of 250 gm of curried emu at Rs 125. Ananda Solomon,

the executive chef of the Taj President in Mumbai, however, says he is

waiting for the demand to present itself. " If we're forced to, we will serve

emu, " he says.

 

On the other hand, Toni da Dhaba, which has been serving emu meat for the

last four years, can't have enough of it. The bird is so sought after that

there's an open pen with a flock of emus fluttering around in it. And

leaving nothing to the imagination, there is a board there that says: " *Yahi

hai emu* (this is the emu). "

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" bernie " <berniew

" anmlpepl " <anmlpepl

Monday, December 10, 2007 10:45 PM

Re: Fw: Emu farms in India

 

 

> they were brought in here a few years ago for racing (Ireland). there was

> however an EU directive prohibiting the exhibition or display if I

> remember rightly for rattites which included the Emus.

> So we stopped it before it started as we could prove they were farmed

> birds as opposed to racing birds which they (hunters) said they were.

> There was no demand for the meat here so it fizzled out.

> ta for that info.

> Bernie Wright.

> -

> " anmlpepl " <anmlpepl

> " bernie " <berniew; " "

> <shubhobrotoghosh

> Cc: <aapn >

> Monday, December 10, 2007 8:48 PM

> Re: Fw: Emu farms in India

>

>

>>> How are these birds killed.does anyone know?

>>

>> Emus and ostriches are slaughtered by beheading, the same as

>> most

>> poultry. Their heads are too small and mobile to permit accurate use of

>> a

>> captive bolt gun.

>>

>> Because the money in the emu and ostrich industry is primarily in

>> speculative sale of breeding stock, relatively few emus and ostriches

>> actually go to slaughter. As birds are not covered by the U.S. Humane

>> Slaughter Act, anyone can slaughter emus and ostriches, but

>> slaughtering

>> them for legal human consumption requires slaughter in a federally

>> inspected slaughterhouse (or a state inspected slaughterhouse if none of

>> the meat will ever cross state boundaries), and would-be emu and ostrich

>> ranchers soon learn that very few inspected slaughterhouses will handle

>> emus and ostriches--none at all in many regions, in part because these

>> birds can be extremely dangerous to handle.

>>

>>

>>

>> Merritt Clifton

>> Editor, ANIMAL PEOPLE

>> P.O. Box 960

>> Clinton, WA 98236

>>

>> Telephone: 360-579-2505

>> Fax: 360-579-2575

>> E-mail: anmlpepl

>> Web: www.animalpeoplenews.org

>>

>> [ANIMAL PEOPLE is the leading independent newspaper providing original

>> investigative coverage of animal protection worldwide, founded in 1992.

>> Our readership of 30,000-plus includes the decision-makers at more than

>> 10,000 animal protection organizations. We have no alignment or

>> affiliation with any other entity. $24/year; for free sample, send

>> address.]

>>

>>

>

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