A 2003 AP photo shows cooking show host Beppe Bignazzi.
Italian state TV has suspended a cooking show host who
shocked the nation by saying cat stew is a Tuscan delicacy he
has enjoyed many times.
RAI TV confirmed on Wednesday that it had suspended Beppe
Bigazzi, the 77-year-old host of a popular morning programme
that offers food tips and recipes in a country renowned for
its cuisine.
When a young woman on the show was startled by Bigazzi saying
he has eaten cat stew many times, the host defended his
culinary tastes, noting Italians eat rabbit, chicken and
pigeons.
Horse meat also is sold in Italian shops.
"Who's not fat, kills the cat," is how Bigazzi began his
lighthearted prattle about cat stew.
Bigazzi claimed cat stew was a Tuscan specialty near the Arno
river valley, but co-host Elisa Isoardi looked so embarrassed
she ducked behind a cart of fresh salad greens whose healthy
virtues the two were supposed to be chatting about.
"Cat, soaked for three days in the running water of a stream"
in Tuscany "comes out with its meat white, and I assure you -
I have eaten it many times - that it is a delicacy," Bigazzi
continued.
His critics included Health Ministry Undersecretary Francesca
Martini.
"Cats are pets protected by law," Martini noted, specifically
against "cruelty, maltreatment and abandonment."
She lamented in a statement issued by the Health Ministry
that Bigazzi's advocating cat stew "hurts sensibility, which
is fortunately steadily growing, of citizens toward animals."
The director of the RAI channel the show runs on, Mauro
Mazza, called the decision to suspend Bigazzi for an
unspecified amount of time as "painful but inevitable."
Only a few moments after revealing his startling recipe,
Bigazzi seemed to anticipate he would be barraged with
criticism. "Now there will be letters from nature lovers. Why
don't they defend rabbits?" he asked.
By Wednesday, two days after the showed was broadcast, the
YouTube video clip had recorded more than 55,000 hits, and
more than 800 comments registered.
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