4 minute read
Firing Up the Food Scene
from Spotong Issue 19
by 3S Media
INDUSTRY NEWS
FIRING UP THE FOOD SCENE International recognition for the Chilli of Soweto as South Africans embrace the new food revolution
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Brian Dick, Geoff Green, both of Slow Food SA, with Carlo Petrini and farmers Phila Cele and Earl Mofokeng Pic by Malcolm Drummond
ASoweto chilli has found fame on the international food scene. product but this honour from Slow Food has been amazing. My team and I are delighted,” he said from Kwa-Zulu Natal where he had gone to share the good news with his family. Petrini said the food gardens he had seen were fantastic and reinforced the message that organic food is not just for people with money. “We must protect our indigenous seed. When 100 percent of seed is controlled by multinationals, agriculture will be over. We don’t want our indigenous agriculture polluted by genetically modified products. We have a right to gardening, and communities have a right to it.” Petrini also met with Xoliswa Ndoyiya, who was the personal chef for many years to the late Nelson Mandela. Sis Xoli, as she is affectionately known, presented him with her book Ukutya Kwasekhaya: Tastes from Nelson Mandela’s Kitchen which Petrini promised to donate to the library of the University of Gastronomic Sciences.
The Chilli of Soweto has been added to the international Ark of Taste thanks to a meeting between the man who started a global food revolution, namely Slow Food founder and United Nations Special Ambassador Carlo Petrini, and Soweto farmer Phila Cele.
Petrini also announced that he will be starting an annual scholarship for one young South African to attend the University of Gastronomic Sciences, which is situated in Pollenzo, Italy. The Ark of Taste is an international catalogue of endangered heritage foods maintained by the global Slow Food movement. It lists species and products that are unique to a country and should be protected. South Africa has 44 listed (with Petrini adding the Chilli of Soweto as the 45th) with plans to add 30 more this year. Petrini was on a four-day visit to Gauteng where he visited a number of community farm gardens in Soweto as well as various artisanal and organic producers in Magaliesberg and Johannesburg. He visited Khayelitsha in the Western Cape the next day. Petrini was hosted by the Slow Food Johannesburg and Cape Town Convivia, who this year made the pledge to create 10 000 food gardens in South Africa. Cele was overcome when Petrini made the announcement, the equivalent in culinary terms to winning a gold medal at the Olympics. He produces nearly 200kg of chilli a week in season as well as a wide variety of other vegetables on a piece of land the size of a football field in Phiri in Soweto. He is passionate about his product, uses permaculture techniques and is scrupulous about the quality of this unique little cultivar. Cele, who has been a farmer since 2011 when he launched Siyazenzela Plant Biotech and Agricultural Consultants, holds a BSc in Microbiology and an Honours in plant biotechnology, both from Wits University. “We have never had such recognition before, particularly on a global stage. Our customers know that we produce a top-class The Chilli of Soweto was one of the attractions at the Slow Food Soweto Eat In & Food Conference, which took place at the Soweto Theatre on Saturday, September 3. The event comprised a food market (selling the produce of the Soweto and Orange Farm urban farmers) plus a selection of classic township street food, a farming and food security conference and the opportunity to eat an Nguni cow from nose to tail.
Izindaba Zokudla (Conversations about Food) coordinated a conference with topics such as “Growing and Producing Food in Soweto”, “Johannesburg: Urban Farmers Speak” and “Buying Food in the City: How to get a healthy and fair deal”. Panellists included dietician and functional medicine specialist Mpho Tshukudu, UJ anthropologist Hilda Bbhenkele, industrial designer Angus Campbell and Wandile Zwane, Head of Department of Social Development, City of Johannesburg. Lunch time saw an Nguni Eat In competition under the auspices of Slow Meat. This culinary extravaganza sees nine teams of chef students and a 10th team of Soweto gogo’s cooking every aspect of a 300kg Nguni cow. Each group drew lots in order to be allocated two cuts of meat (one muscle, one offal). Cost was R20 for entry into the food market as well as the conference and R295 to participate and eat at the Slow Meat Chefs’ Competition. Since its foundation in 1989, Slow Food has grown into a global movement involving millions of people in more than 160 countries, working to ensure everyone has access to good, clean and fair food. It is thanks to Petrini’s efforts that a growing movement of people believe that we can reduce both hunger and obesity while improving the quality of food, the life of farmers and the impact of agriculture on the environment and health along with real cooking, taste and pleasure.