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Halal ham is broadening horizons

Lauren Frayer, SpainJuly 18, 2015

Tasting authentic Spanish ham is often a key part of any tourist's visit to Spain. But it's a treat observant Muslims - who don't eat pork - have been unable to enjoy. Now, though, that's about to change.

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A picture of Faysal Mrad Dali with his cured products
Image: DW/L. Frayer

Deep in the mountains of southwest Spain, a ham festival is underway. Music from traditional Spanish guitars fills the air in the town of Cumbres Mayores, in the heart of Spain's most authentic ham-producing region. Fat black pigs roam free, eating acorns scattered all around the area.

"Curing ham goes back to the 17th century here. We worship the patron saint of pig slaughterers, San Antón," explains Jesus Sanchez Vazquez, the councilman in charge of cultural affairs. The town, which is 700 meters (2296.5) above sea level, boasts the qualities needed to perfectly dry and cure the ham, known as "jamon iberico de bellota."

"It melts in your mouth, it's so smooth. It tastes and smells like the countryside here," he says proudly.

Ham for Muslims?

But that's a taste that Muslims, like local resident Faysal Mrad Dali, will never be able to experience.

"The first time I came with my family to Spain, to Andalusia, I said, 'Why don't the Muslims have this?'"

A picture of so called "Halal Ham" curing.
Meat is cured for the traditional six monthsImage: DW/L. Frayer

So he set out to create it. Dali moved from Belgium to Cumbres Mayores a few years ago, and started making Spain's first halal ham - which is actually lamb and sometimes beef.

The animals are slaughtered according to Muslim tradition, and the meat is cured in the most traditional Spanish method, for a minimum of six months, just like pork. Dali uses fresh local spices, including thyme, paprika and oregano.

Cross-cultural history

At his factory, Dali proudly shows off the racks of cured lamb legs, lamb pate and beef sausages. He slices some to taste. It looks and tastes exactly like pork, which is his goal, but also a potential problem. Some Muslims might refuse to believe this isn't pork, so all of Dali's products have a huge halal certification sticker on the packaging.

He sells his products online in Spain and across Europe, including at restaurants near Granada's Alhambra, the palace of Muslim kings who ruled Spain in the Middle Ages.

A picture and selection of "Halal ham" curing the factory.
In a taste test, many people think that 'Halal ham' tastes similar to porkImage: DW/L. Frayer

"Spain has a very strong Islamic history," explains Bilal Domah, the director of the annual Halal Tourism Conference, held last year in Spain. "Over the last few years, there has been a big growth in Muslim tourists. And when it comes to tourism, food has a real role to play in promoting that tourism."

Pushing the boundaries

Domah says halal tourism is a nearly $200-billion market (184.6 billion euros), and it's pushing the boundaries of traditional Muslim products around the world.

"For example, at the conference there was a company showcasing halal champagne. And that actually took off quite well! A lot of people were trying it, tasting it, apparently it tastes very similar to the real thing."

A crazy idea?

Spanish ham being sliced.
Spain is famous for its foodImage: DW/L. Frayer

Halal products like Dali's lamb "ham" are one way Spain is accommodating an influx of Muslim tourists, many of them Gulf Arabs with money to spend in Spain's crisis-hit economy. But Dali says at first, he got some strange looks in this traditional, rural corner of Spain.

"I came here and I found I am the only Muslim in the village. People say, 'es un poco loco', he's a bit crazy!"

But he didn't take heed about what people might think, and set out to pursue his goal.

"This has been a dream for me, as a Muslim. I'm living and making my product in a region where Muslims, Jews and Christians have a history of living and eating together for centuries."

And they can carry on doing so, it seems, with the help of halal ham and also kosher ham, another new product on the market made from duck or goose. Both products are helping traditional Spanish ways of cooking reach an ever wider market.