It's low in fat, low in food miles and completely free range.
In fact, some claim that Sciurus carolinensis - the grey squirrel
- is about as ethical a dish as it is possible to serve on
a dinner plate.
The grey squirrel, the American cousin of Britain's endangered
red variety, is flying off the shelves faster than hunters
can shoot them, with game butchers struggling to keep up with
demand. 'We put it on the shelf and it sells. It can be a
dozen squirrels a day - and they all go,' said David Simpson,
the director of Kingsley Village shopping centre in Fraddon,
Cornwall, whose game counter began selling grey squirrel meat
two months ago.
At Ridley's Fish and Game shop in Corbridge, Northumberland,
the owner David Ridley says he has sold 1,000 - at £3.50
a squirrel - since he tested the market at the beginning of
the year. 'I wasn't sure at first, and wondered would people
really eat it. Now I take every squirrel I can get my hands
on. I've had days when I have managed to get 60 and they've
all sold straight away.'
(Article continues below)
Simpson likens the taste to wild boar. Ridley thinks it is
more a cross between duck and lamb. 'It's moist and sweet
because, basically, its diet has been berries and nuts,' he
said.
Both believe its new-found popularity is partly due to its
green credentials. 'People like the fact it is wild meat,
low in fat and local - so no food miles,' says Simpson. Ridley
reckons that patriotism also plays a part: 'Eat a grey and
save a red. That's the message.'
A glut of back-to-the-wild TV programmes featuring celebrity
chefs such as Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall has also tickled
the public's palate, but squirrel is still unlikely to be
found in the family fridge. The Observer's restaurant critic,
Jay Rayner, said he had never tasted squirrel, but if he did
have it for dinner 'it would have to be a big, fat country
squirrel and not one of the mangy urban ones you see in cities'.
'People may say they are buying it because it's green and
environmentally friendly, but really they're doing it out
of curiosity and because of the novelty value. If they can
say, "Darling, tonight we're having squirrel", then
that takes care of the first 30 minutes of any dinner party
conversation. I see it remaining a niche. There's not much
meat on a squirrel, so I'd be surprised if farming squirrel
takes off anywhere some time soon.'
Full
article here.