The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Visitors flock to Belgium’s giant omelette festival despite scandal

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MALMEDY, Belgique: About a thousand people flocked to the small Belgian town of Malmedy to eat a giant omelette made of 6,500 eggs, despite the country being at the centre of a scandal involving tainted eggs.

Belgium became the first country last month to officially notify the EU’s food safety alert system of the presence of eggs contaminat­ed by the insecticid­e fipronil, followed by the Netherland­s and Germany.

The insecticid­e, which can harm human health, has since been discovered in eggs in 14 other European countries since the scandal came to light on Aug 1 and has even been found as far afield as Hong Kong.

It has forced millions of eggs to be removed from supermarke­t shelves and the closure of more than 150 farms in the Netherland­s.

“We-were-hit-full-on-by-the-tainted eggs scare,” Rene Bourguigno­n said as he waited to prepare the omelette.

While at least 1,000 people braved rainy skies to get a bite, the turnout was far below last year’s record 7,000.

The local branch of the World Giant Omelette Brotherhoo­d has been organising the festival in Malmedy for more than 20 years.

It spent a week preparing for this year’s culinary opus, collecting 6,500 eggs from carefully selected places instead of the usual 10,000.

“We have total confidence in our local products, our suppliers are local and they fulfilled every health guarantee we asked of them since the beginning,” Bourguigno­n said.

The number of attendees was a good sign, the Brotherhoo­d’s “grand master,” Jean-Pierre Gilles said.

“Of course, the public may have had its doubts and we did fear that a little, but seeing the numbers of people we saw today, I think it all went very well,” Gilles said.

“Any doubts were swept away by friendship and warmth.”

Made simply with eggs, bacon, oil and chives, and cooked over a wood fire, the omelette has been a fixture of the annual festival since the 1990s when Belgium was hit with a similar scandal – over chicken and eggs contaminat­ed with dioxin, a known carcinogen.

Traces of fipronil found in the contaminat­ed eggs are at very low levels.

“The media said you needed to eat eight eggs a day” for the insecticid­e to affect your health, local volunteer Gabiche Chleck said.

“Personally, there’s no way I could eat all that.” — AFP

 ??  ?? Members of the World Brotherhoo­d of the Huge Omelet create a 6500-egg omelet within a 4 metre diameter frying pan in Malmedy. — AFP photo
Members of the World Brotherhoo­d of the Huge Omelet create a 6500-egg omelet within a 4 metre diameter frying pan in Malmedy. — AFP photo

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