S O U N D O F F |
July 8, 2008 |
Subject: G8 'meeting on food shortages,' their lunch and dinner menus |
This is the menu of the food that was served to the leaders of the G8 summit meeting. It cost $280 million dollars just for the expenses to gather all of them together to discus: yes, I kid you not, to discuss the food shortage in the rest of the world. I quess that there is no shortage of food in 'their world'. A 5 course lunch and a 21 course dinner. The news story says it was only a 13 course dinner, but I counted 21 items on the menu for dinner. I shall make no comment on this, but each of you must feel like I do, they should have been served the tomatoes we are receiving from Mexico, served with a heafty dollap of salmonella, ecoli for a dash of seasonings, topped off with a few cyanide capsules laced into their expensive wine, then carted off to the nearest E.R. where they could wait hours for medical treatment. Disgusted U.S. Citizen!
Philip Webster, Lake Toya, Japan Organisers of the G8 summit on the Japanese island of Hokkaido have proudly displayed the menu for a sumptuous eight-course banquet enjoyed by world leaders meeting to discuss international food shortages. Only 24 hours after Gordon Brown urged people not to waste food, and with the summit dominated by fears of global shortages, leading statesmen were treated to smoked salmon and Kyoto beef — having already eaten a five-course lunch. Several African leaders were at the table as the need for their continent to double its food production was discussed at the summit. Lunch began with truffle soup and rare crab while the evening feast, involving 19 separate dishes, had its own theme — grandly entitled "Hokkaido, Blessings of the Earth and the Sea". Organisers boasted that the chef's team, "know everything that there is to know about food". They proclaimed: "The three specialists will make the best of Hokkaido's natural blessings, supported by higher quality ingredients, more natural ingredients and the soil with which to enjoy them." The dishes were prepared by Katsuhiro Nakamura, the first Japanese chef to win the famed one star of the Michelin guide. He was hired as the “grand chef" by the Windsor Hotel where the leaders are staying, 30 miles from the general public and with 20,000 special police officers for security. The presidential suite at the hotel costs £7,000 a night. The Japanese Air Force was flying regular patrols overhead and the coastguard was on stand-by on the island. Aides insist that Mr Brown's warning to householders was not aimed at hectoring people but that ending food waste could save families £8 per week. The G8 summit has cost £283 million, enough to buy 100 million mosquito nets. Andrew Mitchell, the Shadow International Development Secretary, said: “The G8 have made a bad start to their summit, with excessive cost and lavish consumption. “Surely it is not unreasonable for each leader to give a guarantee that they will stand by their solemn pledges of three years ago at Gleneagles to help the world’s poor. “All of us are watching, waiting, and listening." |