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| A sturgeon at a fishery run by Chinese caviar company Kaluga Queen in Qiandao lake, Zhejiang province (AFP Photo/WANG ZHAO) |
The caviar on the menu of Michelin-starred restaurants may come from an unexpected place: China.
The country
has endured embarrassing food scandals in recent years, but its sturgeon eggs
have gained the respect of caviar connoisseurs around the world.
It has also
become pricier for US buyers as Chinese caviar is among the slew of products
hit with 25 percent tariffs in the US-China trade war.
The bulk of
China's production comes from a picturesque lake ringed by mountains in eastern
Zhejiang province where industry leader Kaluga Queen breeds the giant fish.
The brand
was created in 2005 by experts who worked for the ministry of agriculture and
it now produces more than a third of the world's caviar, making China the
global leader.
The
company's sturgeon farm is a 20-minute boat ride away from the shore in
Qiandaohu, or Thousands Islands Lake.
Qiao Yuwen,
a breeder, stood at the edge of the pools where the animals live until they are
between the ages of seven and 15.
The biggest
sturgeons can grow to be four meters (13 feet) long and weigh 300 kilos (660
pounds).
![]() |
An employee
of Chinese caviar company Kaluga Queen cuts open a sturgeon
for its roe (AFP
Photo/WANG ZHAO)
|
"They're
like our babies. We see them from when they're very young, so it's hard when
they are sent to be slaughtered," Qiao said.
"But
there's also, of course, the satisfaction of having contributed to making an
exceptional product," he said before throwing pellets containing shrimp,
peas and vitamins to the fish.
'Price of
a Ferrari'
For a long
time, Iran and Russia fished sturgeon in the wild in the Caspian Sea.
But the
fish population was nearly decimated by overfishing and poaching after the
Soviet Union, which had regulated fishing, fell in 1991.
Sturgeon
fishing in the Caspian Sea was banned in 2008 while sturgeon farms have sprung
up everywhere, with Italy, France and China among the world leaders in the
industry.
Kaluga
Queen has 300 employees looking after some 200,000 sturgeons.
Once they
reach sexual maturity, females are fished out and taken to a laboratory where they
are stunned before their bellies are sliced open to extract the black eggs.
The roe is
then washed, sorted, salted and placed in boxes.
Kaluga
Queen produced 86 tonnes of caviar last year, most of it destined for exports,
with half going to the European Union, 20 percent to the United States and 10
percent to Russia.
Depending
on the species, the price per kilo varies between 10,000 and 180,000 yuan
($1,420 to $25,600).
Sturgeons
producing the most expensive caviar can carry as much as two million yuan worth
of eggs.
"It's
the price of a Ferrari," said Xia Yongtao, the company's vice president.
'Very
good caviar'
Kaluga
Queen has walked a "long road" to win the trust of customers since
the company produced its first jar in 2006, Xia said.
Chinese
caviar had to overcome scepticism from foreign clients who were used to
headlines about food scandals, from contaminated milk powder to soy sauce
containing arsenic and rice tainted with cadmium.
"A few
years ago, customers were reluctant when we talked about Chinese caviar,"
said Raphael Bouchez, president of Kaviari, a Paris-based supplier to renowned
restaurants.
Bouchez
convinced customers by explaining how Chinese producers raise fish and use
methods that respect the environment.
"Chinese
caviar, it must be said, is a very good caviar," Bouchez said.
![]() |
The bulk of
China's caviar production comes from a picturesque lake ringed
by mountains in
eastern Zhejiang province (AFP Photo/WANG ZHAO)
|
"That
said, many of the chefs still do not want it. They prefer to have caviar from
France, Uruguay, or elsewhere," he said.
Today,
Kaluga Queen has an annual turnover of 220 million yuan and counts among its
customers German airline Lufthansa and L'Atelier de Joel Robuchon, a two
Michelin stars restaurant in Shanghai.
Distributors
supply other restaurants around the world, and one buyer said he had delivered
one shipment to Kim Jong Un, according to Xia.
French chef
Guy Savoy, whose Paris restaurant has three Michelin stars and is rated the
best in the world, uses Chinese caviar with skate wings and scallops.
"The
label 'made in China' does not matter," Savoy told AFP. "The
important thing is the quality of the breeding. Those supplied to us are of
remarkable quality."
Lily Liu,
Kaluga Queen's marketing manager, hopes someone else can try her company's
caviar.
"We
hope that Donald Trump will taste our caviar and say: 'I like it! Let's
reduce tariffs and help Chinese caviar conquer America!"




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