Bear

  • Posted: December 23rd, 2011 - 12:44pm by Doug Powell

    The Mandarin Palace Restaurant in in Fredericton, New Brunswick (that’s in Canada), which was closed after rotting bear meat was discovered in a freezer, has reopened after a reinspection by Department of Health on Thursday.

    There's a note on the inspector's report that says a food course must be completed as discussed with the business owners Johnny and Tina Tu.

    "I will be reopened today," said Tu. "I am preparing everything brand new, my chicken balls and my egg rolls."

    Tu said she sat down with government investigators to discuss how and why rancid parts of a black bear were found in her restaurant's cooler. She told The Daily Gleaner she agreed to keep the bear for one of her customers, but the customer later told her to keep the bear.

    Tu didn't know what to do with it and was getting conflicting advice on how to dispose of it.

    "I hope everybody understands that I never touched the bear. I didn't eat it and I wouldn't serve it to people," Tu said.

    Tu said customers know that chicken is chicken and beef is beef.

    "They can taste. They know. There's the difference. I don't want people to be scared. I didn't touch anything with the bear," she said.

    The Health Department said the condition of the bear meat created a high risk for cross-contamination. Officials told Tu and her husband Johnny -- the restaurant's co-owners -- the cooler where the bear was stored had to be stripped bare of its contents and sanitized prior to reinspection. The department also said it would provide information on food-handling techniques and food safety.

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  • Posted: December 21st, 2011 - 6:44pm by Doug Powell

    The Mandarin Palace Restaurant in Fredericton, New Brunswick (that’s in Canada) was closed after decomposing bear meat was found in a cooler during a routine inspection this week.

    The meat, found in the on Tuesday, was turned over to the Department of Natural Resources. An investigation is ongoing.

    The restaurant was closed because of concerns the bear meat could have contaminated other contents in the cooler, but the risk to public health is very low, the Department of Health said in a statement.

    An inspection record posted on the government's website said, "Food must be purchased from an approved source. Wild animals are not approved."

    The restaurant will remain closed until the cooler has been properly cleaned.

    Samples of the bear meat have been sent out to test for trichinella, a parasite that can be transmitted to humans through consumption of raw or undercooked infected bear meat.

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  • Posted: May 14th, 2011 - 10:28am by Doug Powell

    Students travelling home to live in your parent’s basement after graduation today – don’t try this.

    Noor Mahmoodr, a 36-year-old citizen of the United Arab Emirates, was detained soon after midnight by undercover officers at a Bangkok airport with a baby bear, a pair of panthers, two leopards and some monkeys - all aged under two months - in his cases.

    The man, who was trying to get the creatures onto a first-class flight to Dubai from Suvarnabhumi airport, was charged with smuggling endangered species out of Thailand, according to Colonel Kiattipong Khawsamang of the Nature Crime Police.

    He said one of the bags had been abandoned in an airport lounge because the animals were being too noisy.

    The animals were taken into the care of local veterinarians.

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  • Posted: November 19th, 2010 - 7:04am by Doug Powell

    In a form of logic that only the Brits could come up with, The Independent argues that if a recent listeria-related recall of turkey breast and ham by a Texas firm is casting doubt on Thanksgiving plans, then why not go for exotic meats, like the deer and turkeys in my backyard in downtown Manhattan (Kansas).

    Not quite sure how the editors at The Independent got to zoo animals in the headline.

    Chef Dave Arnold, director of culinary technology at the International Culinary Center's French Culinary Institute, blogs in a Nov. 8 blog entry written for Popular Science magazine's Web site, that those who prefer tougher meat should enjoy wild game even more than standard meat and poultry, which he says are generally butchered young to ensure tenderness, and lack the flavor of their full-grown counterparts.

    Arnold's tastes are nothing new - during the Middle Ages, bear meat consumption was symbolic, and bear paws are still considered a delicacy in Cantonese cuisine. Beaver meat has been eaten by indigenous North American populations for generations.

    Upscale Chicago eatery Moto served a road kill raccoon dish back in 2008, and this past June an Arizona restaurant owner caused a public uproar when he put lion burgers on his menu.

    Exotic meats are generally avoided due to concerns over bacterial contamination and animal cruelty. However, in light of recent fears of listeriosis sparked by common meats found in neighborhood supermarkets, people may be more willing to step out of their comfort zones this Thanksgiving.

    But no one got sick in the listeria positive recall cited in the story because at least someone was looking (in this case, U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Food Safety Inspection Service). And the public was warned. Recalls are not the same as outbreaks.

    Dave Arnold's Low-Temperature Game Cooking Notes

    In all cases sear the meat first and put into Zip-loc bags with butter. Cook in an immersion circulator for the prescribed times, then sear again for a minute or two per side on high heat.

    Yak: cook at 56°C for 24 hours. Rich and gamey, with notes of duck.

    Lion: 57°C for 24 hours. Tastes like pork but richer.

    Black bear: 57°C for 3 hours. Tastes a little bloody and metallic. Younger bears are reportedly better.

    Beaver tail: 60°C for 48 hours. Woodsy, delicious.

    Duck, and birds that cook like duck (teal, widgeon): 57-58°C for 45 minutes to an hour for the breast. Braise the legs.

    Squab: 56°C for 45 minutes for the breast. Braise the leg.

    Raccoon: I recommend cooking raccoon in a traditional braise.

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  • Posted: September 23rd, 2010 - 1:48pm by Doug Powell

    Finally, a use for all that zucchini rather than dumping it on unsuspecting friends and neighbors.

    When a 90-kilogram black bear attacked a Missoula County woman's dogs just after midnight on Wednesday on the back porch of her home, she tried to separate the animals, and was bit in the leg by the bear.

    Lieutenant Rich Maricelli, from the sheriff's department said the woman reached for the nearest object at hand on the porch's railing - a large zucchini she had harvested from her garden.

    She flung the vegetable at the bear, striking it and forcing it to flee.
     

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    Wacky and Weird  |  0 Comments
    bear, Montana, zucchini