-
Foodie culture is obsessed
with authenticity.
-
But when we get Moroccan honey,
-
San Marzano tomatoes,
-
that means shipping food,
-
carbon emissions,
-
plenty of waste,
-
and excess packaging
-
for food that, sometimes,
not even as fresh or as delicious.
-
Adding COVID-19,
and you have a whole new problem:
-
frozen supply chains
-
or closed borders.
-
That's changing how we eat and
forcing us to also look at what's local.
-
Some countries, like Russia,
have a lot of experience with this.
-
MADE IN RUSSIA
-
(Alec) Jay Klouz has been
a nightclub promoter in Spain,
-
a tour boat owner in France,
-
and a celebrity chef in Australia.
-
Now, the American lives in Russia
-
where he's added cheesemaker to the list.
-
(Klouz) Every person has a different hand,
-
and this hand makes cheese.
-
You could be more aggressive,
-
and you'll have another cheese.
-
You could be more careful,
-
and you'll have another cheese.
-
You can even be half a degree higher,
-
and you'll have another cheese.
-
(Alec) Klouz uses local ingredients
to make European favorites
-
like feta, Gouda, and ricotta.
-
Flavors that began to make their way here
after the fall of the Soviet Union.
-
(Alec) So, I grew up in Wisconsin,
-
and we've always had cheddar,
pepper jack, all sorts of--
-
you know, real sharp cheeses.
-
Love this stuff.
-
And then I came to Russia,
-
and it was like, cheese was white
and didn't taste like anything.
-
Tastes like plastic.
-
What made you decide to start
making your own cheese?
-
You know, one thing you learn in Russia,
the winters are rough.
-
The Russians prepare for winter
-
so, being prepared means,
also eating good stuff.
-
(Alec) For years, Russia imported
as much cheese as it produced
-
until 2014.
-
Russia annexed Crimea.
-
The US and the EU
slap sanctions on Russia,
-
and President Putin responded by
banning food imports from those countries.
-
Cheesemakers like Klouz
saw sales go way up.
-
Russian production
increased by at least 50%.
-
(Klouz) Please don't forget
to return my spoon.
-
(Sofia) Yes, return the spoon. Thanks.
-
After Russia stopped purchasing
cheeses abroad,
-
the cheese market changed a lot.
-
So we started buying here.
-
We are very satisfied
with the price and quality.
-
(Alec) And how have the current sanctions
changed the industry?
-
(Klouz) With the sanctions there's
more interest in the people making cheese.
-
Like, "Oh, we don't need you,
we have Jay."
-
I'm like, "Yeah, right."
-
Fifty kilos a day,
how am I going to feed Russians?
-
"Jay will save us!"
-
I'm like, what?
(laughter)
-
People are funny here.
-
(Alec) But some people are more confident
in local producers' ability
-
to fill the giant cheesy hole
left by the counter sanctions.
-
Klrill Sharshukov imported Italian cheese
-
until the food embargo forced him
to start making his own.
-
(Sharshuko) Here we have
caciocavallo cheese.
-
A classic Italian caciocavallo cheese.
-
It is fermented for about 6 to 12 months
-
and has a specific, light taste.
-
And here we added fenugreek seeds.
-
Tastes like cheese with with walnut,
-
kind of a sweet dessert-y crunch.
-
It doesn't have nuts?
-
No, no. This doesn't have any nuts,
but is has that flavor.
-
I don't know if this is allowed on TV,
-
but these seeds are
healthy for men, apparently.
-
So this is delicious and healthy for me?
(laughter)
-
(Alec) After the embargo,
-
the government started giving
out subsidies and tax breaks
-
to boost domestic production.
-
Something Sharshuko believes
-
is giving Russians a chance to catch up
to the world's cheesemakers.
-
(Sharshuko) The longer this goes on,
the more experiences we have.
-
We reproduce Italy's cheeses here,
-
replace its classic cheeses,
and produce them.
-
So it would be very difficult to return.
-
(Alec) But the Russian cheese revolution
isn't for everybody.
-
Imported foods were always
too expensive for most Russians.
-
Meaning locally-made burrata will probably
never be on their shopping list.
-
And economists are skeptical
-
that the people
who could afford fancy cheese
-
are going to see local versions
-
as anything other than
a secondary substitute.
-
When we imported cheese, it had quality.
-
We, the small portion of affluent people,
got used to it.
-
When that cheese disappeared,
-
those people stopped buying
Russian copies of cheese
-
because they don't trust the quality.
-
Well, I hear from the cheese producers--
-
Russian cheese producers--
-
who say sanctions have been a huge help.
-
Those you spoke to are very few
because, as a matter of fact,
-
90% of the Russian cheese market
-
is mass market cheeses.
-
I wanted to ask what will happen
-
to Russian cheesemakers
if sanctions are lifted tomorrow?
-
There will be
competition again for 15 to 20%
-
of wealthy people in Russia.
-
People who have invested
in cheese production
-
will be hit hard.
-
(Alec) The drive for food Independence
has protected Russia
-
from supply disruptions during
the pandemic, the government says.
-
It's also helped a fledgling,
farm-to-table movement here.
-
- Five more minutes.
- No, two and a half.
-
(Alec) Ivan and Sergey Berezutskly have
their own farm to produce ingredients
-
for their restaurant,
-
which in 2019 was named
one of the best in the world.
-
It's a simple dish: potato with caviar.
-
Here you are.
-
The majority of our guests
need healthy and fresh food.
-
This is a development Russia
and other countries have come to.
-
The sanctions have
accelerated the process.