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  2. Goose as food - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goose_as_food

    Goose as food. In cooking and gastronomy, goose is the meat of several species of bird in the family Anatidae, which also includes ducks and swans. The family has a cosmopolitan distribution, and various wild species and domesticated breeds are used culinarily in multiple cuisines. There is evidence as early as 2500 BC of deliberate fattening ...

  3. Roast goose - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roast_goose

    In Guangdong and Hong Kong, roast goose is a variety of siu mei, or roasted meat dishes, within Cantonese cuisine. It is made by roasting geese with seasoning often in a charcoal furnace at high temperature. Roasted geese of high quality have crisp skin with juicy and tender meat. Roast goose are normally served with plum sauce to augment its ...

  4. Foie gras - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foie_gras

    Foie gras (French for ' fat liver'); French: [fwa ɡʁɑ], English: / ˌfwɑːˈɡrɑː / ⓘ) is a specialty food product made of the liver of a duck or goose. According to French law, [1] foie gras is defined as the liver of a duck or goose fattened by gavage (force feeding). Foie gras is a popular and well-known delicacy in French cuisine.

  5. Canada goose - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canada_goose

    Canada goose. The Canada goose (Branta canadensis), sometimes called Canadian goose, [2][3] is a large wild goose with a black head and neck, white cheeks, white under its chin, and a brown body. It is native to the arctic and temperate regions of North America, and it is occasionally found during migration across the Atlantic in northern Europe.

  6. Goose - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goose

    The word "goose" is a direct descendant of Proto-Indo-European *ǵʰh₂éns.In Germanic languages, the root gave Old English gōs with the plural gēs and gandra (becoming Modern English goose, geese, gander, respectively), West Frisian goes, gies and guoske, Dutch: gans, New High German Gans, Gänse, and Ganter, and Old Norse gās and gæslingr, whence English gosling.

  7. Foie gras controversy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foie_gras_controversy

    Gavage feeding. Anti-foie gras protestors at the Hôtel Meurice, Paris. The production of foie gras (the liver of a duck or a goose that has been specially fattened) involves the controversial force-feeding of birds with more food than they would eat in the wild, and more than they would voluntarily eat domestically.

  8. AOL Food - Recipes, Cooking and Entertaining - AOL.com

    www.aol.com/food/recipes/roast-goose-pork-prune...

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  9. Goose barnacle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goose_barnacle

    Goose barnacles, also called percebes or turtle-claw barnacles or stalked barnacles or gooseneck barnacles, are filter-feeding crustaceans that live attached to hard surfaces of rocks and flotsam in the ocean intertidal zone. Goose barnacles formerly made up the taxonomic order Pedunculata, but the group has been found to be polyphyletic, with ...