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Updated Wednesday, February 10, 2010 10:05 am TWN, By Nicole Winfield, AP Italy minister defends sponsoring of McDonald's burgerMinister Luca Zaia has argued that McDonald's new McItaly burger — using all Italian beef, Asiago cheese and artichoke spread — will pump euro3.5 million (US$4.8 million) more a month into the pockets of Italian farmers grappling with tough economic times. But for a country that gave birth to the Slow Food movement a quarter-century ago and prides itself on its varied, delicious and healthy cuisine, Zaia's enthusiastic support of McDonald's has been hard to swallow. It didn't help that Zaia and McDonald's executives launched the new burger last month at McDonald's flagship restaurant in Rome's historic center near the Spanish Steps, the chain's first Italian outpost. The opening of those Golden Arches in 1986 famously inspired a relatively unknown Turin foodie, Carlo Petrini, to launch what became Slow Food — the international movement that embraces local, organic food and home cooking over fast food and the industrialized food chain. In a recent front-page opinion piece in La Repubblica newspaper, Petrini challenged Zaia and McDonald's to back up their claims of helping Italian farmers with a kilo-by-kilo accounting of how much farmers are actually getting paid out of the deal. And he chafed at Zaia's suggestion that the all-Italian menu would “globalize the identity of Italian agriculture.” “Taste, like identity, has value only when there are differences,” Petrini wrote. Zaia, who relentlessly courts publicity for Italy's agricultural products, has defended his partnership with McDonald's as an important new market for Italy's farmers and a way to reach young Italians who make up the bulk of McDonald's customers. Subscribe to The China Post and save 25%. Click here Comments |
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I personally admire the Italian agricultural minister, his decision to sponsor McDonald is right. Which is famed trendy food for youth even it is rated junk food.