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D'Artagnan, Inc.
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D'Artagnan, Inc. : ウィキペディア英語版
D'Artagnan, Inc.

D’Artagnan, Inc. is a seller and manufacturer of pâtés, sausages, smoked and cured charcuterie, all-natural and organic poultry, game, free-range meat, foie gras, wild mushrooms and truffles. Privately owned by Ariane Daguin, who co-founded the company in 1984, its corporate headquarters and distribution center are in Newark, NJ. The company generates revenue through direct sales to restaurants, retailers and to the consumer public on its website. Reporting $50 million in sales in 2008,〔( Peter Rubin (February 3, 2008) "Guess Who's Coming As Dinner?" ), ''Good'', Issue 009〕 D’Artagnan employs 125 people, and has a fleet of 18 trucks that deliver products to restaurants throughout the Mid-Atlantic region. Consumer website orders are shipped in insulated boxes by overnight courier.
==History==
D’Artagnan was founded in 1984 by Ariane Daguin and George Faison. Their partnership was formed while working together at a charcuterie shop in New York City. There they met a farmer with the first domestically-raised foie gras in the United States. He was looking for distribution for his product, which the charcuterie shop declined. Daguin and Faison founded D’Artagnan to distribute it themselves.〔("The duck stops for D'Artagnan's Ariane Daguin" ) (February 17, 2010) ''The Star-Ledger''〕
D’Artagnan originally sold whole lobes of raw foie gras to the chefs of New York City. At the time the only foie gras available to restaurants was canned product imported from Europe. D’Artagnan’s product line quickly expanded to include game meats and heritage breed poultry, organic chicken, heritage turkey, grass-fed beef, humanely-raised veal and pork, pheasant, quail, squab and prepared products like pâté, dry-cured sausages, smoked duck breast and duck prosciutto. D’Artagnan was an early proponent of humanely raised, antibiotic and hormone-free organic meat. D’Artagnan sources from small farmers and creates cooperatives of farms where possible, to ensure that animals are raised in humane conditions. They procure meats from small family farms that are committed to humane, sustainable free-range, antibiotic and hormone free methods of animal husbandry. D’Artagnan contracts with 35 co-ops nationwide, representing about 1,500 farmers as of 2009.〔( Edible Manhattan, No. 6 July/August 2009 )〕 D’Artagnan’s line of products became more available to the consumer public when it began selling items to major grocery stores Balducci’s and the Food Emporium in 1996.〔 "There is no reason you should be brutal to animals when you don't have to," Daguin was reported saying, "This is the first time ever I saw pigs being killed and not shrieking, because they didn't realize it."〔
In February 2002, D’Artagnan opened a restaurant and retail shop, D’Artagnan the Rotisserie, which served Gascon specialties, including foie gras burgers, cassoulet, duck confit, Armagnac, and the wines of the Southwest region of France. A retail area sold D’Artagnan prepared products such as pâtés and terrines. William Grimes reviewed D’Artagnan the Rotisserie in ''The New York Times'', and gave the restaurant two stars, saying: "D’Artagnan has the real thing. In fact it has so much personality it can sell it by the pound. The food is authentic, robust, earthy and powerfully flavored." The restaurant closed in 2004.〔(Stephanie Clifford (Nov 1, 2006) "Until Death, or Some Other Sticky Problem, Do Us Part" ), ''Inc.'', Mansueto Ventures LLC., New York〕
In 2005, Daguin bought out Faison’s share of the company to become the sole owner.〔 She continues to run the company as CEO, with Andrew Wertheim as President, and David Irwin as CFO.
D’Artagnan celebrated its 25th anniversary in February 2010 with a week of food-and-wine-related events, live music, an art exhibition, a rugby game and dinners prepared by visiting French chefs and their American counterparts.〔(Meryle Evans (May 2010) “Vive D’Artagnan” ), ''Food Arts'', New York〕

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