The Phnom Penh Post

Once near extinction, Amazon giant prized fish winds up on dinner plate

- Maira Renou

ITS white flesh is tender and tasty, it can measure up to 3m long and weigh more than 200kg – meet the pirarucu, one of the world’s largest freshwater fish, and native to the Amazon.

The enormous animal, once threatened with extinction, is now on dinner plates in Rio de Janeiro’s fanciest restaurant­s, thanks to a number of chefs who have championed the delicacy, and the indigenous communitie­s who ensure its continued survival.

“Without them, there would be nothing left,” says Frederic Monnier, the head chef at the city’s hip Brasserie Rosario.

“What they’re doing for the Amazon is priceless,” adds Jessica Trindade, the Brazilian chef at Chez Claude, an institutio­n in the city’s restaurant scene.

Chef Marcelo Barcellos uses pirarucu in his moqueca, a fish stew swimming in palm oil and seasoned with coriander that is a signature Brazilian dish originatin­g in the northeaste­rn state of Bahia.

Served with a toasted manioc flour mixture and nuts that come straight from the Amazon basin, the moqueca delights foodies’ taste buds and eyes, as the white fish contrasts with the yellow flour and green spices.

The taste is akin to that of other saltwater whitefish like pollock or cod.

Barcellos, the executive chef and owner of the restaurant Barsa, is one of several Rio chefs who have happily added pirarucu to his menu.

But not that long ago, before pirarucu made it to the top tables in the Marvelous City, Arapaima gigas – or Amazonian cod, as it is sometimes called – almost vanished from menus.

It was brought back from the brink of extinction thanks to the establishm­ent at a nature preserve of a sustainabl­e fishing programme with strict quotas.

Pirarucu can only be fished from July to November, the non-mating season.

‘Superior fish’

Raising the pirarucu’s profile with Rio’s top chefs has certainly helped.

The Taste of the Amazon project has helped do that. Recently, nine chefs travelled to northern Brazil to observe how the Paumari tribe has establishe­d sustainabl­e practices for harvesting pirarucu.

Through their contact with the indigenous fishermen, the chefs learned which parts of the fish are the best. That knowledge ended up on their menus.

“It’s an excellent product, with a fabulous flavour, without that earthy taste that some freshwater fish have,” Trindade says.

For Ricardo Lapeyre of the Michelin-starred Laguiole Lab, the experience surpassed his expectatio­ns.

He figured he would take the trip just to learn a bit more about how to cook the fish, and bring some new ingredient­s back to his kitchen.

In the end, he is on board the pirarucu train, and is one of its biggest fans.

“It’s a superior fish – the quality is largely superior to what we get from fish farms,” he said.

“I became aware of the importance of the forest and the support given to projects that benefit local population­s.”

Preservati­on

Adevaldo Dias, an official at ASPROC, the cooperativ­e that manages the sustainabl­e fishing of the pirarucu, was pleasantly surprised with how keen the chefs were to take part in the project.

“I was struck by their commitment, their understand­ing of how this fish is good for the Amazon, and the need to pay fishermen properly,” Dias explained.

The sustainabl­e fishing project for the pirarucu was put in place 20 years ago.

Since then, the giant fish population has soared, from more than 2,500 in 1999 to more than 190,000 last year.

Thanks to ASPROC, the fishermen are paid seven reais (about $1.75) per kilogramme, against the four reais they could count on by selling in local markets.

But restaurant­s pay a whopping 48 reais per kilogramme, because of transporta­tion costs. The dish is then sold for about 70 reais.

Leonardo Kurihara – the coordinato­r of Operation Native Amazon (Opan), which is overseeing the Taste of the Amazon initiative – chefs are vital because “they are at the other end of the chain, presenting the product to the consumer”.

Felipe Rossoni, also at Opan, explains that the initiative has cleared the way for new markets for the pirarucu.

“Sustainabl­e fishing helps preserve the environmen­t, and reinforces the autonomy and clear identity of traditiona­l communitie­s,” Rossoni said.

 ??  ?? This file handout picture released by the Mamiraua Institute of Sustainabl­e Developmen­t taken on November 26 last year shows fishermen carrying a large Pirarucus (Arapaima gigas) fish at the Amana Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Reserve, in Amazonas State, northern Brazil.
This file handout picture released by the Mamiraua Institute of Sustainabl­e Developmen­t taken on November 26 last year shows fishermen carrying a large Pirarucus (Arapaima gigas) fish at the Amana Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Reserve, in Amazonas State, northern Brazil.

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