Should you be tempted by this recipe for quail with chorizo, a favourite discovered at Tom Pemberton’s wonderful Notting Hill restaurant, Hereford Road, I highly recommend British quail fromThe Wild Meat Company, whose birds are loose-housed in free-to-fly barns. They are also larger than usual.
Sometimes it feels like a quail is a meal for half an appetite or, if you’re making a feast, why not use them as a starter?
For the aioli
Once upon a time, a few would have been added to the bag, over early season stubbles, but these days with modern game laws, quail will have migrated back to Africa by the time the season is in full swing. Interestingly, they are the only migratory gamebird in Britain, and I think that categorisation just about justifies their place in this column.
There is something pleasantly medieval about eating quail and it said that they were a particular favourite of Jane Seymour, Henry VIII’s third unfortunate wife. While farmed meat is seldom as ethical or sustainable as game, there is plenty of responsibly farmed quail in the UK, reared in places where the birds are allowed all the freedom they desire.
My one and only visit to a quail farm saw the birds housed in a stable with a courtyard outside — with plenty of netting above to prevent escapes — and the quail were busy being their usual bonkers selves. Grass was planted in their run, along with other ground cover — enough for them to potter about in, yet not so much that the farmer could not catch them. There was also a large sandpit, which offered a place to ‘bathe’. Despite the availability of responsibly farmed quail, intensive farms for both quail meat and eggs still dominate the market.
Compassion in World Farming displays examples of some appalling husbandry on its website, showing egg-laying birds housed in tiny, low-ceilinged cages, plus thousands of quails destined for the meat business crammed into barns. I’ll never comfortably eat a quail’s egg canapé again without asking about the provenance of the particular eggs I’m being offered.