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Spice of Life_(clip)

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    The most expensive spice
    in the world is saffron,
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    and honestly, for good reason.
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    It takes a thousand flowers
    to produce just one ounce,
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    but now, if you can believe it,
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    harvesting the magical stuff
    is getting even more complicated.
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    SPICE OF LIFE
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    (Mohammad) We sow these seeds
    that we take from the old stock.
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    4 or 5-year old seeds.
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    We take seeds when they have thickened.
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    Then we distribute and sow them in rows.
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    Then, by the second year,
    it starts producing in good numbers.
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    (narrator) Flower by flower,
    this is the world's most expensive spice.
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    And Mohammad Yusuf has picked these
    saffron buds since he was 10 years old
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    on a one-acre farm
    that's been his family for generations.
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    This is the season of flowers,
    and we're now collecting them.
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    Whatever we harvest is in our fate.
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    (narrator) Saffron is harvested
    in a two-week window each fall.
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    It only grows at a specific altitude,
    which in India means Kashmir,
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    a territory at the foothills
    of the Himalayas,
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    where about 32,000 people
    cultivate the spice.
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    See, this is a flower.
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    When we reach home,
    we will open and separate it like this.
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    (narrator) Those red strings, once dried,
    sell for up to $4,000 a kilogram,
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    and a few of those
    will pay the bills for the year.
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    We work until late night.
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    Yes.
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    There is no disturbances at night.
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    Days are full disturbances.
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    (narrator) Kashmir's saffron
    is wildly popular across India
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    for its use in basic cuisines,
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    Ayurvedic medicine,
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    and as a dye,
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    which is used for Hindu religious garments
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    and the Indian flag.
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    Saffron is also the color of
    the Hindu nationalist movement
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    that's pledged its undying support
    to Prime Minister Narendra Modi,
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    who has long sought
    more control over Kashmir,
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    a majority Muslim area
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    that's dealt with the Pakistani-backed
    separatist movement for decades.
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    In August 2019,
    Modi changed the Constitution
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    to take away Kashmir's Special Autonomy.
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    One nation, one constitution.
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    (narrator) He imposed a lockdown
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    and cut off phone
    and internet services for months
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    to prevent a mass uprising.
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    The political lockdown has since
    been replaced by a COVID-19 one,
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    but Kashmiris still haven't gotten
    their internet freedom back,
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    which has stunted the saffron trade
    and hit growers hard.
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    And on top of all that,
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    farmers are facing an additional threat.
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    Climate change.
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    Since global warming,
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    we've been facing a great loss.
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    Before, we had rain
    during our times of need.
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    But since that rain disappeared,
    we've been badly affected.
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    (narrator) Close to a third
    of Kashmir's saffron fields
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    have disappeared since 1997,
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    a crisis which prompted the government
    to invest 54 million dollars in 2010
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    into reviving the industry.
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    They dug wells, placed pipes, et cetera,
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    by they failed to deliver the water.
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    Whatever they show,
    it is far from reality.
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    (narrator) After nine years,
    only about 15% of the sprinkler systems
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    meant to help farmers have been built.
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    Though the government has been slow
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    to set up the infrastructure
    meant to boost production,
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    it has come up with a plan
    to sell future harvests at a better price.
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    Our saffron qualitatively
    is the best in the world.
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    In terms of aroma, taste, and flavor.
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    We decided that we'd campaign
    before the authorities
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    that we must get to the GI tag.
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    (narrator) GI stands for
    "Geographical Indication,"
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    a status the World Trade Organization
    gave to Kashmiri saffron in July 2020
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    to certify its superior traits.
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    Farmers can now get their harvest GI tag
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    at a brand-new government
    processing facility.
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    The adulteration which
    otherwise used to be done
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    or repacking the saffron
    from the other countries
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    on the name of
    the Kashmiri saffron will stop,
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    and it will generate huge revenues
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    and a premium price for the farmers.
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    (narrator) Compared to Iranian saffron,
    which makes up 90% of the world supply,
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    the Kashmiri variant
    has almost 30% more crosin,
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    a compound that gives the spice
    its rich redness,
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    pain relieving properties,
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    and a taste so unique
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    that Kashmiri chefs won't stand
    for using anything else.
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    There is a certain elegance
    in our Kashmiri saffron.
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    There is saffron from Iran,
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    but it only gives [food] color,
    just like turmeric.
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    But our saffron reflects Kashmiri culture.
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    You can tell the two apart
    from their taste.
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    (narrator) Bilal Ahmed oversees
    the preparation of wazwan,
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    a traditional feast made for weddings,
    family gatherings, even funerals.
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    Saffron is a key ingredient
    in several main dishes of the meal
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    that can stretch for dozens of courses.
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    We bring saffron,
    then dry it on a copper plate.
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    Then we crush it with a mortar and pestle.
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    Next, we add some water
    to make a paste out of it.
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    (narrator) A proper wazwan typically
    requires two to three dozen chefs,
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    one ton of meat,
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    and about 50 grams
    or $200 worth of saffron.
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    But wazwan have been smaller than usual
    for more than a year now,
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    as the political and pandemic lockdowns
    have limited the size of gatherings.
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    For example, we were supposed to cook
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    12 to 13 quintals of meat
    [2,600 lbs.-2,900 lbs.]
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    for this function,
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    but now it is only two and a half
    to three quintals [550 lbs.- 660 lbs.].
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    That's the difference.
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    It's made a lot of difference.
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    Our business is being affected,
    and it will change our culture.
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    (narrator) Life in Kashmir isn't
    just changing because of the pandemic,
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    a political crisis,
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    or global warming.
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    The kids who grew up here
    are now making different choices,
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    looking for opportunities
    outside the saffron fields
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    and the kitchens of their homeland.
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    For chef Ahmed,
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    that means working harder
    to keep his culture thriving.
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    Our children aren't keen to do this work
    because it's very laborious.
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    They say, "We will do some
    other business, but not all this."
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    This will go on because
    I can't find comfort
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    in doing anything else.
Title:
Spice of Life_(clip)
ASR Confidence:
0.83
Description:

Saffron is the most expensive spice in the world. Its cultivation and harvesting are very laborious and about 250,000 flowers are needed to obtain one kilogram of pure saffron. A very high-quality saffron is grown in Kashmir, which is also a key ingredient in the traditional cuisine of the region, as well as in the rest of India, where it is used as a condiment, medicine or dye. However, the current political instability in the Kashmir region, the confinement due to the COVID-19 pandemic and the effects of global warming are impacting negatively the cultivation of saffron in this region and threatens the future of the production of this spice for the thousands of families that have depended on it for generations.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Eating With My Five Senses
Project:
COUNTER SPACE_(CLIPS)_The Issues - (Ep17-Ep24)
Duration:
06:40
Jenny Lam published English subtitles for Spice of Life_(clip)
Jenny Lam edited English subtitles for Spice of Life_(clip)
Jenny Lam published English subtitles for Spice of Life_(clip)
Jenny Lam edited English subtitles for Spice of Life_(clip)
Jenny Lam published English subtitles for Spice of Life_(clip)
Jenny Lam edited English subtitles for Spice of Life_(clip)
Jenny Lam edited English subtitles for Spice of Life_(clip)
Jenny Lam published English subtitles for Spice of Life_(clip)
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