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Strict
control measures are taken to guarantee food safety for
the Beijing Olympics.
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Food
with Olympic characteristics.
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A
tableware arrangement contest for Olympic waiters and waitresses.
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DURING the 2008 Olympics, 280,000 people from more than 200 countries
and regions will need catering services. What will Beijing put
on their dinner tables, and how will it handle the entire catering
process? These are issues that the Beijing Organizing Committee
for the XXIX Olympiad (BOCOG) cannot afford to ignore.
What's on the Menu?
"What do you like most during your competitions?"; Chen
Zhiyu, head of the BOCOG games service department, once asked
a table tennis world champion. "Stir-fried eggs,"; was
the reply. From that answer, Chen reasoned that the safest food
for athletes during the Games are what they are used to.
So, familiar dishes from around the world will dominate the Beijing
Olympic menu. They are catered according to the daily caloric
and nutritional needs of the athletes, as well as their religious
and dietary customs, in juxtaposition with the Chinese culinary
culture.
The menu includes halal, vegetarian, low-sugar, Indian, Judaic
and other representative cuisines, and all the dishes will have
ingredient labels, level of nutrition, calories and fat. "The
Olympic menu should be an expression of care for athletes from
different parts of the world,"; said Cai Tongyi, commissioner
of the Beijing Olympic Food Safety Expert Panel and director of
the Beijing Food Institute (BFI). For example, consideration is
given to general food taboos. Europeans and Americans, for instance,
generally do not like sea cucumbers; Muslims do not eat fish that
have no scales or fins; and many foreigners do not like fish that
have too many small bones.
To guarantee food safety, traditional Chinese pickled, haloid
and barbecued dishes - which are usually prepared by adding
some medicinal herbs - have been excluded from the Olympic
menu for fear that they might affect the results of athletes'
doping tests. On December 27 last year, the International Olympic
Committee announced that the Beijing Olympics would perform 4,500
doping tests, which is 25 percent more than at the Athens Games.
According to Mr. Cai, the names of nearly 1,000 Chinese dishes
have been translated into English, and diners will know clearly
what they are and how they taste by reading the English names
and seeing the illustrations accompanying them. For example, gongbaojiding
is "chicken in sour and spicy sauce,"; and gulaorou is
"pork in sweet and sour sauce.";
Promising Western Food Market
Western food has been the standard cuisine catered at previous
Olympic Games. Though the International Olympic Committee has
set apart 30 percent of the Beijing Olympics' catering for
Chinese food, Western cuisine is still dominant. So now people
will wonder whether Beijing is capable of providing genuine Western
foods.
Four hundred Chinese chefs have completed their study of Western
cuisine in London. According to Xu Bin, secretary general of the
Beijing Western Food Association, over the past two years the
association has conducted Western cuisine training, inviting experienced
chefs from France and the United States to teach Western food
preparation, and condiment and catering management. So far, Beijing
has trained more than 10,000 high-level chefs who can provide
over 20 foreign cuisines, such as American, French, Italian, Japanese,
Korean and Thai foods.
Currently Beijing has 3,000 Western restaurants. It is estimated
that during the Games period, Beijing will receive seven to eight
million international travelers, which will create a big market
demand for Western food. "Beijing will see a huge Western
food market and a booming Western food industry,"; concluded
Xu Bin.
Food Safety Control
Food safety is the paramount concern for Olympic catering. According
to standard practice, all Olympic foods are labeled to identify
their producers, and two-year follow-up investigations have been
made of these producers to determine that their supplies are free
from farm chemical residues, stimulants and other harmful elements,
and are processed up to standard. The nutritious elements, protein,
fat and vitamins of Olympic foods are also quantified.
Food safety control is very strict. All the food that finally
gets to the dinner table is put under 24-hour monitoring, from
production to transportation to cooking, and samples are taken
at regular intervals. All ingredients come from designated venders,
and before they get into the Olympic kitchen, they are tested
for farm chemical residues, germs and other harmful elements.
On August 8 of last year, Beijing began the Olympic foods tracking
system. Food administrators can log onto the website and watch
through a camera the production and transportation situations
of Olympic food venders, and the situation of every participant
involved in all the links of Olympic catering.
"When athletes slot their card for the food they have ordered,
the card reader will present related food information, such as
ingredients, caterer, processor, and even the source vendor, and
in this way we exercise meticulous administration of the athletes'
meals,"; said Cai Tongyi.
This tracking system has been in operation at the first designated
group of five food and beverage suppliers, 41 processing and distribution
enterprises and 10 supermarkets. In addition, Beijing has set
up 280 monitoring sites to keep watch of designated Olympic hotels,
competition and training venues, and restaurants in scenic areas
to ensure food safety during the Olympic period.
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