Books > The Foie Gras Wars

The Foie Gras Wars
How a 5,000-Year-Old Delicacy Inspired the World's Fiercest Food Fight  
This edition: Hardcover, 368 pages
Availability: Usually ships within 2-3 days
Our Price: $25.00
Also available in

Description

In announcing that he had stopped serving the fattened livers of force-fed ducks and geese at his world-renowned restaurant, influential chef Charlie Trotter heaved a grenade into a simmering food fight, and the Foie Gras Wars erupted. He said his morally minded menu revision was meant merely to raise consciousness, but what was he thinking when he also suggested -- to Chicago Tribune reporter Mark Caro -- that a rival four-star chef 's liver be eaten as "a little treat"? The reaction to Caro's subsequent front-page story was explosive, as Trotter's sizable hometown moved to ban the ancient delicacy known as foie gras while an international array of activists, farmers, chefs and politicians clashed forcefully and sometimes violently over whether fattening birds for the sake of scrumptious livers amounts to ethical agriculture or torture.

"Take a dish with a funny French name, add ducks, top it all off with celebrity chefs eating each other's livers, and that's entertainment," Caro writes. Yet as absurd as battling over bloated waterfowl organs might seem, the controversy struck a serious chord even among those who had never tasted the stuff. Reporting from the front lines of this passionate dining debate, Caro explores the questions we too often avoid: What is an acceptable amount of suffering for an animal that winds up on our plate? Is a duck that lives comfortably for twelve weeks before enduring a few weeks of periodic force-feedings worse off than a supermarket broiler chicken that never sees the light of day over its six to seven weeks on earth? Why is the animal-rights movement picking on such a rarefied dish when so many more chickens, pigs and cows are being processed on factory farms? Then again, how could the treatment of other animals possibly justify the practice of feeding a duck through a metal tube down its throat?

In his relentless yet good-humored pursuit of clarity, Caro takes us to the streets where activists use bullhorns, spray paint, Superglue and/or lawsuits as their weapons; the government chambers where politicians weigh the ducks' interests against their own; the restaurants and outlaw dining clubs where haute cuisine preparations coexist with Foie-lipops; and the U.S. and French farms whose operators maintain that they are honoring tradition, not abusing animals. Can foie gras survive after 5,000 years? Are we on the verge of a more enlightened era of eating? Can both answers be yes? Our appetites hang in the balance.

Related multimediaclose x

Video

1 to 1 of 1
  • 1635265513_27153627001_th-27153349001
    1. Mark Caro: Off The Shelf
    16:40
    27151587001

Audio

1 to 1 of 1
  • 1635265513_62699183001_thumb-c6db9c1c-e325-4502-bdd1-d0541013da34
    1. Marc Caro: Off The Shelf
    16:39
    43999703001
See more multimedia
The Age, November 23, 2009
...we should be concerned about the treatment of animals in all industrialised farming." In his recent book Foie Gras Wars, US author Mark Caro points out an argument made by the foie gras growers there — that the chefs who are against it, ...
Leite's Culinaria, July 10, 2009
...at Gravatar. Fill in the information below, and you?ll be entered to win a copy of The Foie Gras Wars: How a 5,000-Year-Old Delicacy Inspired the World?s Fiercest Food Fight by Mark Caro (Simon & Schuster, 2009). Note: ? Portugal?s wine ...
AlterNet.org, July 2, 2009
...The battle over (aka, foie gras) rages on-fueled in part by Chicago Tribune writer Mark Caro's compelling new book, The Foie Gras Wars: How a 5,000-Year-Old Delicacy Inspired the World's Fiercest Food Fight. Although some people still ...
Huffington Post, June 24, 2009
...battle over fatty duck liver (aka, foie gras) rages on -- fueled in part by Chicago Tribune writer Mark Caro's compelling new book, The Foie Gras Wars: How a 5,000-Year-Old Delicacy Inspired the World's Fiercest Food Fight. Although some ...
Chicago Tribune, May 12, 2009
...muse, 'Is this what government should be doing? Telling you what to put on toast?' Tribune entertainment reporter Mark Caro sets Trotter up that way, in somewhat outsize fashion, at the opening of his new book, 'The Foie Gras Wars.' And ...
Chicago Tribune, May 9, 2009
...muse, 'Is this what government should be doing? Telling you what to put on toast?' Tribune entertainment reporter Mark Caro sets Trotter up that way, in somewhat outsize fashion, at the opening of his new book, 'The Foie Gras Wars.' And ...
Houston Chronicle, April 12, 2009
...of torturing waterfowl to turn their organs into super-fatty treats for dining elites. A local foodie fight got Mark Caro, an entertainment reporter for the Chicago Tribune, interested in whether foie gras lives down to its reputation. In ...
Examiner.com, April 5, 2009
...Chicago Tribune writer Mark Caro is making the rounds in Philadelphia with his new book, The Foie Gras Wars: How a 5,000-Year-Old Delicacy Inspired the World?s Fiercest Food Fight. The book chronicles ...
Time, March 26, 2009
...gras, farmers force-feed their fowl via a metal tube inserted in the ducks' throats. Chicago Tribune entertainment reporter Mark Caro was thrust into this very dicey corner of haute cuisine when he wrote a 2005 story about a famous Chi-Town ...
EOnline.com, March 23, 2009
...this is somewhere near the top.' That's the kind of spicy celeb bitching The Chicago Tribune's Mark Caro serves up in his new book on the über-politically correct subject of goose and duck liver destruction. Title's The Foie Gras Wars: How ...
Chicago Tribune, March 15, 2009
...council's foie gras passion before it ever bloomed into a target of widespread scorn. In Tribune reporter Mark Caro's new book, 'The Foie Gras Wars,' Ald. Edward Burke (14th) says Daley flatly declined a chance to do that. 'I asked him,' ...
Chicago Tribune, March 15, 2009
...council's foie gras passion before it ever bloomed into a target of widespread scorn. In Tribune reporter Mark Caro's new book, 'The Foie Gras Wars,' Ald. Edward Burke (14th) says Daley flatly declined a chance to do that.'I asked him,' ...
Cleveland Live, March 15, 2009
...Chicago Tribune reporter Mark Caro plays no small role in his new book, 'The Foie Gras Wars: How a 5,000-Year-Old Delicacy Inspired the World's Fiercest Food Fight.' His willingness to plunge himself ...
Philadelphia Inquirer, March 12, 2009
...s council last year reversed a short-lived ban. 'People seemed sick of even talking about it,' writes journalist Mark Caro in his new book The Foie Gras Wars, which devotes three chapters to the Philadelphia protests. Terry McNally, owner of ...