Canada to feed Chinese appetite for sea cucumbers
[Photo/China Daily] |
Although he couldn't cite the exact numbers, Colwell says that the export volume of Canadian sea cucumbers into China has increased exponentially.
At least 30 percent of last year's catch was imported into China.
The wild variety of sea cucumber is usually larger and rounder than a Chinese farmed creature. They also have little thorns on the cylindrical body's skin and have a ring of tentacles around the mouth.
Gao Songwen, owner of United Trans, says that Canadian sea cucumbers have greater nutritional and therapeutic value as compared to the ones farmed in China, because they are richer in nutrients, including holothurin compounds, minerals and protein, and are free of contaminants because they grow slowly in deep, cold waters.
The chilly waters also force Canadian sea cucumbers to swim a lot, resulting in more muscle texture in the body, Gao says.
Founded in 1986, the company started to export sea cucumbers in 2013 to Asian countries and regions where Chinese live, such as Malaysia. The new agreement marks its first official entry into the Chinese market, where it will export dried sea cucumbers (with skin and meat) as well as frozen ones.
Because the Canadian sea cucumbers are wild, not farmed, the price is no more than one-third of that of Chinese sea cucumbers, Gao says.
Chief chef Liu Daoming of the St Regis Hotel Beijing, which hosted the media conference, demonstrated how to cook Canadian sea cucumbers during the event.
He also prepared them with cordyceps flowers salad, fried with abalone sauce, and in a kung pao version - all flavorful, though the meat was chewier than in Chinese varieties.