Fonterra slashes forecast milk price, again
Fonterra has slashed another 50c off its milk price forecast as global milk flows shows no sign of easing.
The New Zealand team of chefs has scooped two bronze medals in the Culinary Arts section at the 2016 Culinary Olympics in Erfurt, Germany – with the Hot Kitchen section still to be competed in.
Fonterra global category and innovation manager Keith McDonald, who’s handling logistics for the team, says the team of chefs: Steve Le Corre, Mark Sycamore, John Kelleher, Darren Wright, Richard Hingston and Corey Hume, are ‘absolutely rapt’ with the result.
The team’s table centrepiece was a food model of the Lord of the Rings character, Gollum.
“The judges totally got the New Zealand theme and where we were coming from. We were marked down because the heat in the room started to melt Gollum, a little, but we were judged on the skill that went into it,” McDonald says.
It’s a different medal system to the first, second, and third placing of the sporting Olympics. In the Culinary Olympics, all teams start with 100 points and then points are deducted by the judges for various things they perceive as being wrong with the dish. There could be as little as half a point separating gold from silver and silver from a bronze medal.
Fonterra’s director of global foodservice Grant Watson says the team has done an amazing job in the Culinary Art section.
“The standard of competition was extremely high and for New Zealand to pick up two bronzes in their first attempt in 28 years is a fantastic result and speaks to their skill and the quality of the food they produced,” Watson says.
The bronzes were gained in the pastry, and the savoury sections of the Culinary Art section. In this event, a variety of fine-dining restaurant dishes that are usually served hot to a guest are presented and displayed cold to the judges. Chefs must use gelatine and aspic to give food the appearance of being fresh and hot.
On Wednesday morning NZ time, the NZ Anchor Food Professionals team will compete in their final category – the Hot Kitchen section; a section they describe as their strength.
In this event, dishes are served a’la carte at the Restaurant of the Nations, where members of the public dine alongside members of the Culinary Olympics judging panel. The competing teams do not know which of the 110 diners the judges are.
The team is hoping for gold with their salmon entrée, lamb loin main course, and South Pacific-inspired dessert.
Legal controls on the movement of fruits and vegetables are now in place in Auckland’s Mt Roskill suburb, says Biosecurity New Zealand Commissioner North Mike Inglis.
Arable growers worried that some weeds in their crops may have developed herbicide resistance can now get the suspected plants tested for free.
Fruit growers and exporters are worried following the discovery of a male Queensland fruit fly in Auckland this week.
Dairy prices have jumped in the overnight Global Dairy Trade (GDT) auction, breaking a five-month negative streak.
Alliance Group chief executive Willie Wiese is leaving the company after three years in the role.
A booklet produced in 2025 by the Rotoiti 15 trust, Department of Conservation and Scion – now part of the Bioeconomy Science Institute – aims to help people identify insect pests and diseases.