National Geographic Traveller (UK) - Food

MEET THE MAKER Olive oil makers in Lebanon

Ghassan Maalouf and Rayan Kassis are on a mission to spread the word about Lebanese olive oil

- haramoun.co.uk Farida Zeynalova

In the foothills of snow-capped Mount Hermon in south Lebanon, Ghassan Maalouf and Rayan Kassis are labelling bottles of olive oil ready for shipment. It’s common for Lebanese families to make olive oil from their own orchards, and Rayan, who spends a third of the year at his family home in Lebanon, would do the same every autumn, bringing bottles back to the UK, where he lives the remainder of the time. After years of seeing Spanish, Italian and Greek olive oils dominate the market, he “found it absurd that nobody in Europe knew about Lebanese olive oil”. And with that, in 2019, Haramoun was born.

Rayan and Ghassan work together to create their organic extra virgin olive oil using native souri and baladi olives. Rayan and his wife, Kate, are the logistical cogs of the brand. Ghassan, meanwhile, is a farmer and agricultur­al specialist who comes from a long line of olive oil producers.

Their small estate is in the village of Rachaya Al Foukhar, surrounded by pine, olive groves and oak trees and, while it has a difficult history — this once conflict-ridden area sits at the crossroads of Lebanon, Syria and Israel — Rayan prefers to talk about its “outstandin­g natural beauty”. And the entire process happens right here.

Ghassan spends most of his time working in the fields, meticulous­ly examining the trees for bugs that might ruin or reduce the quality of the olives. Then, during harvest, he picks and presses them, which can take anywhere from three weeks to two months.

“This is the way our parents would treat the land. They rarely used any pesticides, fertiliser­s or herbicides, and we decided to continue with that,” Ghassan says.

The end product is an extra virgin olive oil that’s low in acidity and peroxide — and simultaneo­usly fruity, bitter and warm. When asked what makes the area so well suited to olive farming, Ghassan credits its biodiversi­ty.

Haramoun produces between 4,000 and 7,000 bottles a year, and channels 10% of its revenue into Impact Lebanon, a charity that supports families affected by the Beirut blast of August 2020. The business might still be relatively small-scale, but the team behind Haramoun has two main goals: to bring Lebanese olive oil to tables around the world, and to preserve and champion the land in which it grows.

Dice a pineapple into small chunks, sauté with butter and season with sugar and chilli. This can be used as a topping for fish or pork tacos, or even a salad.

2 Sorbet

Juice a pineapple, then combine the juice with a small amount of mezcal, sugar syrup and sorbet stabiliser. Pass through a sorbetmake­r and garnish with chopped mint.

3 Glaze

Combine pineapple juice with brown sugar, soy sauce and spices such as cardamom and cinnamon. Reduce to a sticky glaze, perfect for pork or chicken.

4 Grilled

Peel and cut a pineapple into steaks and grill on the embers of a barbecue. Once the juices from the pineapple start to spit and the fruit is caramelise­d, dust with sugar and cinnamon and enjoy warm.

5 Piña colada

For this classic cocktail, pour rum, pineapple juice and coconut cream into a cocktail shaker, shake well with ice and garnish with more pineapple.

 ??  ?? Rayan Kassis (left) and Ghassan Maalouf have been producing olive oil together since 2019
Rayan Kassis (left) and Ghassan Maalouf have been producing olive oil together since 2019

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