Inside the Dubai-based company revolutionizing inflight kosher meals
Why shouldn’t Kosher airplane food be fantastic?
That’s the question that Matt Rickard, Godrume Kriel and
Trent Sanft are trying to answer with Kosher Arabia.
As the first-of-its-kind kosher catering facility in the
Gulf , Kosher Arabia is quickly becoming the region’s go-to kitchen for all
things Kosher.
The company’s goal, as I learned during a recent visit to
its headquarters, is simple: to provide fresh airline meals in futuristic,
biodegradable packaging that adheres to the strictest level of Jewish dietary
laws.
It might sound simple on paper, but no single caterer has
cracked the code yet, according to the trio. That’s especially true in the Gulf
region, which before 2020, wasn’t exactly where you’d find Jewish travelers.
Before Kosher Arabia, those ordering Kosher food on flights
departing from Dubai would either be served frozen or shelf-stable meals, most
of which were produced weeks (or even months) in advance and flown in from
various corners of the world.
Now, Kosher passengers departing from Dubai have some of the
freshest meals in the sky.
According to Trent Sanft, the kitchen’s executive chef,
Kosher Arabia’s meals are consumed between eight and 12 hours after the time of
production, which is nearly 50% less time the average airline meal.
Another selling point for Kosher Arabia’s meals is the focus
on sustainability. “We want to be thinking ahead,” said Kosher Arabia’s general
manager, Matt Rickard, referencing all the waste that’s usually associated with
packaged airline meals.
He showed TPG a demo tray that had much less plastic
wrapping and single-use plastic waste than you usually find on planes.
As for the food itself, that’s in Sanft’s domain. Along with
his team of 10 chefs, they devise the menu according to each airline’s specific
preferences.
For instance, one airline might say that it wants a 300-gram
entree made with chicken.
It’s then up to Shaft’s team to come up with a recipe and
meal. In that case, Kosher Arabia would whip up a chicken and vegetable tajine,
a traditional North African dish.
Kosher Arabia officially opened earlier this year in March,
about six months after the historic Abraham Accords were signed between Israel,
the United Arab Emirates and the United States.
But, despite the normalization of ties, the facility has
been a work in progress for well over five years, according to Kriel, who told
TPG that the underground Jewish community had first approached the government
about opening something similar in 2016.
Fast forward five years, and in October 2021, the kitchen
produced 4,000 kosher meals for a mix of airlines, representing 70% of its
business. (The local Jewish community and other private events in the region
accounted for the remaining 30%.)
Kosher Arabia is located on the premises of the Al Maktoum
International Airport, located in the Dubai South neighborhood, and most
recently in the news for hosting the Dubai Airshow.
The Kosher kitchen occupies 17% of the existing Emirates
Flight Catering facility that was originally built at Dubai’s “other” airport
when there were talks that Emirates would move there from its current hub at
Dubai International Airport (DXB).
After the meals are produced, they must be driven 45 minutes
in a refrigerated truck directly to the airline’s main catering plant at DXB,
before being loaded into individual service carts.
Though it might sound inconvenient to be so far from the
major hub, the shipping process isn’t the challenge.
What’s hardest for Kosher Arabia is sourcing the raw
ingredients with the right levels of religious certification. Getting meats and
processed foods isn’t easy, according to Kriel, who told TPG that the facility
imports meats from Poland. The pickles come from Turkey. Many other goods are
brought in from Israel.
While Kosher Arabia is still working through some start-up
kinks, it believes it’s well on its way to becoming a powerhouse in Kosher
catering.
As for what’s next, Kosher Arabia is eagerly looking forward
to Emirates commencing service to Tel Aviv, which has now been delayed multiple
times due to the pandemic.
Rickard estimates that nearly 50% of passengers on those
flights will be ordering Kosher meals, which will keep his team very busy in
the coming months.
And looking further into the future, Rickard’s vision is to
expand Kosher Arabia worldwide.
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