Halloumi and hellim: The story of an island and its cheese
Leyla Kazim makes a delicious journey to Cyprus, and finds there is way more to halloumi than barbecues and fries.
Halloumi, or hellim as its known by Turkish Cypriots, is now ubiquitous in our supermarkets, fast food chains and on restaurant menus. We import almost 50 per cent of the cheese produced in Cyprus. But its significance on the divided island from where it hails is bigger than you might imagine, and never more so than right now. In 2021, halloumi gained PDO status which means that any cheese labelled as halloumi within the EU has to be made on the Mediterranean island to a traditional recipe. And as Leyla Kazim finds, the dairy industry is having to adapt fast.
But halloumi is more than just an export. On a divided island (there has been a border maintained by the UN since 1964), halloumi (Greek) or hellim (Turkish) is produced by both sides, and has been for millennia. In this programme Leyla travels to Cyprus to meet the people producing hellim and halloumi, to hear about its present and gauge it's future. She鈥檒l watch it being made at scale in factories and in kitchens. She鈥檒l meet dairy farmers and question the officials behind the new PDO status. And most importantly, she鈥檒l taste a lot of halloumi.
Presented by Leyla Kazim
Produced in Bristol by Clare Salisbury
Last on
Broadcasts
- Sun 5 Mar 2023 12:32麻豆社 Radio 4
- Mon 6 Mar 2023 15:30麻豆社 Radio 4
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