Times Colonist

Vendors decry proposed ban on kebab additive

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BERLIN — The doner kebab, that grilled fast-food sandwich that is the gastronomi­c equivalent of an American hamburger in many European cities, is under fire.

The European Union’s legislatur­e is moving to ban the phosphates used in the slabs of meat at the heart of the popular street snack that originated in Turkey. Up-in-arms kebab vendors in Germany have skewered the idea.

EU lawmakers are citing health concerns based on studies that linked phosphates to cardiovasc­ular disease. Owners of takeout restaurant­s and industry groups claim the additives are needed to keep seasoned kebab meat juicy and flavourful, both during transport and on the vertical retail rotisserie­s where it is cooked.

Fuelling the brouhaha is that some sausages containing phosphates are allowed to be sold in EU countries and would not be affected by any move involving kebab meat.

The disparity has some vendors alleging that “doner discrimina­tion” was cooked up deliberate­ly to disadvanta­ge Turkish-owned businesses.

“They are looking for ways to hurt Turkish businesses here,” said Baris Donmez, owner of a 24-hour kebab bistro in Berlin.

The kebab issue came up when the EU’s executive commission proposed to officially authorize the use of phosphates in the lamb, mutton, beef or veal that goes onto a shop spit. Some other meats had previously received such clearance.

The proposal ran into trouble in the European Parliament earlier this week when its Health Committee voted 32-22 to oppose it. Based on more recent health studies, legislator­s expressed concern that carving out blanket approval for kebab meat could put Europeans at greater risk of heart disease.

A rejection by the full Parliament when it meets in two weeks would send the proposal back to the commission — and keep the mighty kebab lingering in limbo.

Just the threat of any changes to the beloved dish — in Europe, shaved kebab meat usually comes stuffed into pita bread with shredded lettuce, tomatoes, onions and dressings — made headlines in Germany, where the doner kebab is the late night grub of choice.

“If the European Parliament gets its way, this would be the death sentence for the entire doner kebab industry in the European Union,” Kenan Koyuncu of the German Associatio­n of Doner Kebab Producers told Germany’s Bild daily newspaper.

Renate Sommer, a member of German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s conservati­ve party in the European Parliament, wrote on Facebook that “a ban of the phosphate addition would be the end of doner production and would lead to the loss of thousands of jobs.”

According to daily Frankfurte­r Rundschau there are 16,000 doner restaurant­s in Germany.

The doner sandwich is a recent European interpreta­tion of the Turkish roast classic, introduced to Germany by immigrants from Turkey.

Donmez is convinced the ban on the chemical in kebab meat will never be implemente­d in Germany. “Germans love doner,” he said, looking at the long line of customers at his Rosenthale­r Grill und Schlemmerb­uffet restaurant. “Nobody’s going to take away from them.”

 ??  ?? A man slices cuts of meat from a rotisserie spit inside a doner restaurant in Frankfurt, Germany, this week. The European Union’s legislatur­e seems to be moving toward a ban on the doner kebab as millions know and love it, for health reasons.
A man slices cuts of meat from a rotisserie spit inside a doner restaurant in Frankfurt, Germany, this week. The European Union’s legislatur­e seems to be moving toward a ban on the doner kebab as millions know and love it, for health reasons.

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