The Quebec duck becomes the Quanard

In an effort to distinguish, the Association of Quebec Duck and Goose Breeders is launching the Quanard, a label that will be affixed to meat at the grocery store and that will allow consumers to understand (or not?) that their duck is from Quebec.


“The idea at the start was to occupy the space,” explains Philippe Saint-Jean, vice-president of business development at Agro-Québec, the firm that worked on this recognition project, with the breeders. Is the message so obvious? “No, admits Philippe Saint-Jean, who qualifies him more as subtle. But it catches the eye, he says, and it forces the consumer to ask questions. »

So that was the idea: to attract attention.


IMAGE PROVIDED BY AGRO-QUÉBEC

The new Quard logo

Metro is the first retailer to participate: for a six-month test period, not only will the duck become the Quanard, with this new logo, but it will leave the small specialty meats section to find itself in the big leagues, side of the chicken.

Breeders had already surveyed consumers and demanded this space for their ducks, rather than a small off-centre and “elitist” corner, specifies Philippe Saint-Jean. “The duck comes out of the closet,” he says.

Finally, this new logo wants to clearly distinguish local meat from foreign volatiles. French foie gras, for example, but also Hungarian duck. The Quebec Duck and Goose Breeders Association has seven producers, including Rougié and Canards du Lac Brome. This identification program was partly funded by the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food of Quebec.

The duck is wading

The duck industry is doing neither badly nor well, in terms of consumption – since it has remained stable in Quebec for several years. “The fact that it’s stable, we see it in a good light,” says Thomas Delannoy, director of sales and marketing at Rougié, a breeder of mule ducks, a species intended for force-feeding.

According to him, the Quanard campaign is first and foremost a recognition initiative for consumers who will be able to choose local meat more easily. “We don’t have the indecency to think we’re going to eat duck every day and that’s not our goal,” he says.

It remains a festive product: the duck, we buy it to have fun!

Thomas Delannoy, Sales and Marketing Director at Rougié

Still, with the start of the summer season and the return of barbecues, the pleasures could multiply, he says. For this, the Metro campaign is timely.

According to a Léger survey conducted last year for the producers’ group, 76% of Quebec consumers consider that duck is intended for special occasions and less than one person in five (17%) has integrated it into their food routine.


PHOTO EDOUARD PLANTE-FRÉCHETTE, LA PRESSE ARCHIVES

Breeding at Canards Lac Brome

Robert Caswell, president of the Association of Duck and Goose Breeders, believes that if consumption is not higher in Quebec, it is quite simply because consumers who go to the meat counter do not see not the duck. “When you see a prime rib, you buy it,” he says.

For ten years, the Hungarian duck has made its nest in Quebec grocery stores: imports increased around 2015, but fell slightly with the avian flu crisis in Europe. Producers here say this is unfair competition because the birds are not raised or slaughtered under conditions that meet Canadian standards.

Robert Caswell, also general manager of Hudson Valley Farms, which has a farm in Saint-Louis-de-Gonzague, in Montérégie, believes that the appearance of Quanard will allow people who want to buy local products to recognize Quebec duck First look. “Consumers here, he says, should know that we make a great product. »

Learn more

  • 76
    Number of Quebec farms where farm birds are raised – ducks and geese, but 90% of the income of these companies comes from duck production.

    source: Quebec Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food

    1
    Quebec is the only foie gras producing province in Canada.

    source: Quebec Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food


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