The Denver Post

Caviar on Doritos? How a delicacy is becoming a cheaper snack

- By Alyson Krueger

Before going home to Philadelph­ia to watch the Super Bowl on Sunday, Cheyenne Corin, 27, a freelance journalist in Washington, D.C., texted her mother a special request: cheese steaks topped with caviar.

“Cheese steaks are a great celebratio­n food and caviar is a great celebratio­n food, so why not have them together?” she said. “I can’t wait.”

Michelle Park, 40, a television journalist who lives in Essex County, New Jersey, always has a few jars of Olma Caviar in her refrigerat­or — not for dinner parties or date nights, but for her 4-year- old daughter and her play dates. “The kids come over and ask for caviar because they know our house is a caviar house,” Park said. “Sometimes we put it on Ritz crackers or on top of a sour cream dip.”

Trinh Carreon, 31, who posts Tiktoks of herself trying different foods, recently sampled the Tiktok fad of Doritos topped with creme fraiche and caviar, calling it the “most bougiest food combo I have ever tried.”

“The crunch of the Dorito is nice, and then the little pops of caviar,” she told her 1.2 million followers. She puckered her lips in satisfacti­on before giving her verdict: “Delicious.”

Caviar has gone from being a luxurious delicacy reserved for the fanciest of occasions, such as fashion week parties and weddings, to, for some, a flavorful topping served at everyday gatherings including book club readings and

tailgate parties.

Even Taco Bell has jumped on the caviar train posting a Tiktok video in January showing a guy named Josh filling a Doritos Locos Taco shell with creme fraiche and “spoonfuls of caviar.” “We’ve got to get that thing on the menu real quick,” the video’s host said.

“Caviar is really having a high-low moment, where there is something for everybody,” said Celine Yousefzade­h, 29, an investor in New York who started a caviar brand named CYK during the pandemic.

That’s because the price of caviar has plummeted in recent years, thanks to sturgeon farming in China, which flooded the market. As of May 2021 China supplied one-third of the world’s caviar market, according to a report produced by the European Commission.

According to the Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on of the United Nations, caviar in Europe, for example, cost 1,300 euros (about $1,275) per kilogram in 2022. Ten years earlier, it cost $1,686 per kilogram. (A kilogram is about 36

ounces.)

“In the past, caviar was so expensive because there weren’t a lot of producers, so you would only come across it at black-tie galas and Michelin- starred restaurant­s,” said Kristen Shirley, founder of La Patiala, a luxury lifestyle website. “But then China became the biggest exporter in the world, and it changed the landscape by selling it more cheaply.” It became much more affordable, she said, and turned into a “fun thing, not just a food eaten by oligarchs.”

Domestic farming has also made caviar more accessible. “There is this Beluga sturgeon that is historical­ly from Russia, and the wild one is endangered, but now there is a farm in Florida making it at an aqua center instead of relying on the wild stock,” said Mike Tonetti, CEO of Fultonfish­market.com, the online counterpar­t to the historic market in New York City.

The online fish market has seen significan­t growth in caviar sales in the past year, Tonetti said. “Requests have increased for both large and small sizes, meaning people are serving more caviar when entertaini­ng at home,” he said. Some caviar experts don’t know what to make of the trend. “Look, it’s not my style to put caviar on Doritos, but I’m happy for those people,” said Yousefzade­h, the caviar entreprene­ur. “It makes me cringe a little, but if it means people are interactin­g with the product and becoming familiar with it, I will roll with it.”

She’s certainly not opposed to benefiting from it. “I’ve done an event with Fini Pizza in Brooklyn where we put Golden Osetra caviar on a $5 slice, as well as events for Saks where we make custom tins for each guest,” Yousefzade­h added.

Shirley has been surprised by how many restaurant­s in New York City now serve caviar. “You only used to see caviar at a handful of restaurant­s, and now it’s every nice restaurant I go to, even trendy ones,” she said. “I am even seeing caviar at bars. I saw it at American Bar the other night, I thought that was so random.”

Caviar was served in the greenroom during the Grammys last weekend, alongside martinis, juices and bottles of water. “One of our artist’s teams, Jazmine Sullivan, once asked if there would be caviar, and we thought it was a good idea,” said Emile Chaillot, a spokespers­on for Grey Goose, which sponsored several Grammy events. “Caviar is not too heavy, not too clingy, not too rich. You can’t go wrong. When you have caviar, no matter what you are doing, it puts you in a mood where you feel special.”

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? The price of caviar has plummeted in recent years, thanks to sturgeon farming in China, which flooded the market.
GETTY IMAGES The price of caviar has plummeted in recent years, thanks to sturgeon farming in China, which flooded the market.

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