Kampot red pepper was recently selling in Germany for as much as 378 euro per kilogram ($185 per pound), compared to an average import price of about $8 for one kilo in Europe for Vietnamese pepper.
Cambodia's 'perfect pepper' is conquering the world's taste buds
Associated Press / News Miner | 25 January 2017
KAMPOT, Cambodia — A nearby sea,
flanking mountains, a quartz-rich soil: It's the perfect spot on earth,
devotees say, to yield a product they describe in that rapturous
vocabulary usually reserved for fine wines: "aristocratic, virile,
almost aphrodisiacal," with subtle notes of caramel, gingerbread and
mild tobacco.
Celebrity chefs from Paris to Los Angeles swear by Kampot pepper, a southwestern Cambodian spice with a tragic past that is now reclaiming its global pre-eminence. It is also proving to be "black gold" for some of its once-impoverished farmers, thanks in part to Kampot pepper last year being awarded a Protected Geographical Indication by the European Union. This identifies unique products — like Stilton cheese, Champagne or Darjeeling tea — as originating in a very specific region.
So
far Kampot pepper production is a mere dusting — just 70 tons last
year. Vietnam, the world's top pepper producer, churned out some 145,000
tons of the spice. But more plantations are springing up while Kampot
quality is rated as high as ever and hitherto slack markets, like the
United States, are getting hooked on the spice. A New York chef has even
concocted a Kampot pepper ice cream while Michelin three-starred French
chef Olivier Roellinger rhapsodizes about its "olfactory richness" and
broad spectrum of flavors.
The
spice's EU designation "has permitted a renaissance of pepper in
Kampot. ... This not only recognizes the singularity of this pepper but
helps protect it from imitations," says Nathalie Chaboche, a Frenchwoman
who with her Belgian husband, Guy Porre, owns La Plantation, where
pepper plants entwine 20,000 posts on a rolling green landscape fronted
by the Gulf of Thailand.
The
couple, who started the enterprise four years ago after lucrative
careers in the computer industry, aim to boost production from 6 tons
last year to 50 tons in 2018. They intend to grow without weakening
quality control or endangering Kampot's status as a "premier cru," a
French term for wine and other produce signifying impeccable quality —
and hefty price.
Kampot red
pepper was recently selling in Germany for as much as 378 euro per
kilogram ($185 per pound), compared to an average import price of about
$8 for one kilo in Europe for Vietnamese pepper. The farm-gate price for
the three pepper varieties — red, white and black — averages around $10
per pound.
Believed to have
originated in southern India, pepper became a widely traded item across
Asia and Europe. Pepper farming in Cambodia was first recorded by a
Chinese traveler in the 13th century, and energized centuries later by
French colonialists. By the early 1900s, annual production peaked at
8,000 tons.
War disrupted the
industry and after their 1975 victory, the murderous Khmer Rouge turned
farmers into slave laborers. Deeming the "king of spice" too decadent
for their ultra-revolution, the regime left plantations to decay.
A
Japanese aid worker, Hironobu Kurata, pioneered a revival in the
mid-1990s, but the scars of the Khmer Rouge era took long to heal. As
late as 2000, only 2 tons were grown annually, but now about 450 farms
produce Kampot pepper. Most belong to the Kampot Pepper Promotion
Association, which assists in price-setting and marketing while policing
strict standards, including adherence to organic practices.
Cultivators use methods tested over 700 years, with some injecting new techniques.
Sorn
Sothy, a former teacher and social worker, tries to reproduce the
jungle environment native to the pepper plant on her small plantation.
Palm leaves are used as shade; the soil is enriched with bat and cow
manure mixed with bloodied animal bones. To ward off predatory insects,
she sprays plants with a bitter extract from the leaves of neem trees.
The
plantation run by Chaboche and Porre is Cambodia's first semi-automated
pepper operation, but its more than 100 employees still do much of the
work by hand. "Our growing is traditional. The processing is modern,"
says Porre.
Jean-Marie
Brun, a French agricultural development expert, says the advent of
large plantations could lower prices, and possibly quality. "The future
will tell us if the large plantations are as successful as the
smallholder farms," he says.
Ngoun
Lay, the association's head and a fourth-generation pepper farmer,
waxes bullish about the future despite potential problems and ongoing
robust sales of fake Kampot pepper, mostly from Vietnam.
A
recent report, he says, shows European demand for the brand at around
200 tons while production next year is expected at some 100. Farm gate
prices have tripled over the past seven years, keeping once-poor farmers
on the land rather than seeking menial work in neighboring Thailand.
Stephane
Arrii, producer of the Marquis de Kampot label, worries that extensive
deforestation has degraded the region's soil. He says huge plantations
on the still-fertile lands of northeast Cambodia could one day offer
competition.
But will they match Kampot's quality?
"As a Frenchman, I can attest that tasting Kampot pepper is like making love," says Arrii. "Once you start, you can't stop."
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