The Good Life France Magazine Winter 2016 | Page 66

Caviar is one of the most expensive foods in the world. Most think of it as a Russian delicacy but it’s also been produced in France for more than a century…

Mike and Wendy McDowell from the UK have loved France since spending childhood holidays there and actually met in the Loire Valley. When the opportunity rose for them to start a business, working with one of the finest French caviar producers – they leapt at the chance.

History of Caviar in France

In the late 1800s, Russian immigrants who settled in the Gironde area noticed that local fishermen catching Siberian sturgeon in the rivers would eat the meat and discard the roe. This changed when the Russians showed the French how to create caviar and it became a popular

delicacy. Following overfishing of wild sturgeon, the Government banned fishing for it and set up a partner farm to raise and protect the fish. There are now five caviar farms in France. Wendy and Mike work with Caviar de France, the oldest working caviar farm, based at Moulin de la Cassadotte, in the Gironde department.

Entente Cordiale

Thie partnership was formed when Wendy was made redundant from her job in 2011 with a trainer manufacturer. “We used the redundancy money to set up Fine French Caviar in the UK” says Mike as he recalls the stress of their new venture, just as their baby was born. “We spent countless nights lying awake worrying. I remember Wendy putting on lots of makeup to hide her baggy eyes so that she looked ready for meetings with customers! She set up a website and was taking orders whilst trying to feed the baby”.

But they knew that they had a great product and it inspired them to keep going. They have two types of caviar – both exclusive in the UK. Diva is a smooth, creamy caviar for the more amateur palate, made using the "malossol" method, meaning that only fish roe and natural salt is used to make it, without any preservatives. It has an authentic, light buttery taste, with a hint of warmth and hazelnut. Ebène is perfect for the connoisseur’s palate, tender, subtle and well-balanced with a hint of oyster, sea urchin, butter and hazelnut.

French Caviar a la Carte