
Christmas Special
Julia Bradbury examines attitudes to Christmas meat - where it comes from, how it is raised, how it gets onto the plate and the history of people's eating choices.
Every year in the run up to Christmas, millions of birds are killed for yuletide dinner tables. In a huge national mass cull that begins in November and has a deadline of December 25th, more than 10 million turkeys and nearly half a million geese are slaughtered. Many of these will come from huge factory farms working intensely for this time of year.
Julia Bradbury examines our attitude to Christmas meat - where it comes from, how it is raised, how it gets to your plate and the history around our eating choices.
In a specially constructed restaurant-cum-studio built around a poultry abattoir unit, invited guests watch as the birds are brought in for killing. They are stunned, bled, de-feathered and gutted before their eyes by experienced professional slaughtermen. The birds are then butchered and part of their flesh is cooked and eaten in the studio by the audience.
Eight geese and turkeys are brought for slaughter from farms in Lancashire and Essex. The slaughter process continues as normal and each of the birds is checked by an inspector from the meat hygiene service, while a leading veterinary surgeon gives a running commentary of events.
The audience participates by eating some of the cooked poultry and discussing their attitudes to the trade in mass produced birds versus those from smaller farms.
Last on
Credit
Role | Contributor |
---|---|
Presenter | Julia Bradbury |
Broadcasts
- Thu 11 Dec 2008 21:00
- Thu 11 Dec 2008 23:45
- Mon 15 Dec 2008 22:30
- Tue 16 Dec 2008 02:10
- Thu 18 Dec 2008 01:55
- Fri 19 Dec 2008 04:10
- Tue 22 Dec 2009 23:45
- Wed 23 Dec 2009 04:10