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High grouse prices could mean chefs don’t put the wild bird on the menu this year

High grouse prices could mean chefs don’t put the wild bird on the menu this year

Today (12 August) marks the start of the UK’s grouse season – also known as the ‘Glorious Twelfth’. There is little cause for celebration, however, as the early shots are not expected to produce many birds. This means that prices are likely to be prohibitively high for many restaurants early in the season when grouse are most sought after by diners.

A number of factors have contributed to the high mortality rate of capercaillie this year, including very wet weather earlier in the year, a parasite that destroys bird eggs and a heath beetle that robs the birds of their main food source.

The price for young spring-born grouse is expected to be over £25 per bird at the start of the season, an increase of almost 40 per cent on the previous season when young grouse sold for around £18.

Old grouse, born the previous year or even earlier, are less expensive but are not quite as valued by chefs.

Gary Foulkes, head chef at the recently opened Belgravia restaurant Cornus, says he will not be putting grouse on his menu this year after his game supplier told him to “make the effort” and said prices were more than double last year’s.

“We will wait and see how things develop, but it does not look good,” he says.

“The prices I’ve been quoted would mean a menu price of up to £70. This is less of a problem at the gentlemen’s clubs that offer grouse early in the season because people just pay for it, but for a restaurant like Cornus, this is too much.”

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