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Snails and tahini: Lebanon's best kept culinary secret

Snails are traditionally harvested and cooked in autumn, but a local entrepreneur is expanding its use in haute cuisine and cosmetics
Snails cooking in a pan with herbs in Le Petit Gris’ kitchen (MEE/Sunniva Rose)

BEIRUT - Makram Rabbath’s eyes twinkle as he gushes about one of Lebanon’s best-kept culinary secrets.

“As a child, I would wait impatiently for my grandmother to pick snails in her garden and cook them for me the traditional way, with a tarator sauce (a tahini-based sauce),” he recalls.

His Beirut restaurant, Le Petit Gris – the French name for the common garden snail – is dedicated to gastropods, which are central to an age-old Lebanese tradition. Snails are usually picked from the gardens between September and November.

A snail on a swiss chard leaf in Rami Salman’s farm in the Bekaa Valley (MEE/Sunniva Rose)
“Every year, when the first rain comes at the end of summer, around September or October, the Lebanese gather the snails in their gardens up in the mountains,” explains Rabbath.

“They boil them several times with different spices like cinnamon or bay leaves. Then they eat them by simply dipping them in a tarator sauce,” he says. 

Snails a la stroganoff at Le Petit Gris (MEE/Sunniva Rose)
Rabbath, who trained at the Ecole hoteliere de Lausanne, a Swiss hospitality management school, decided to add an extra twist to the traditional dish when he opened Le Petit Gris in 2011.

The restaurant’s chef, Chadi Hreiz, serves the traditional dish known in Arabic as bzeh ma' tarator or snails with tarator, but also offers other snail dishes: the French way - with garlic and herbs (a la bourguignonne); as well as with a creamy mushroom sauce (a la stroganoff); or made with scrambled eggs; or blue cheese or rosemary with linguine; and an asparagus risotto.

Snails with linguine and rosemary at Le Petit Gris (MEE/Sunniva Rose)
At Le Petit Gris, half a dozen escargots are served for around $10, and a dozen for $20.

'Pure protein'

In Lebanon, snails are commonly served either with tarator or a la bourguignonne, a recipe imported from France, where snails are cooked with butter, shallots, garlic and parsley.

Snails with tarator sauce at Le Petit Gris (MEE/Sunniva Rose)
The snails are normally served in their shell, though Rabbath prefers serving them without. Snails are a delicacy in Europe and particularly popular in France and Italy.

“People are afraid of tasting snails because they associate it with its slimy texture,” says Rabbath, “but it’s the opposite. The meat is firm. It’s pure protein.”  

Chef Chadi Hreiz in Le Petit Gris’s kitchen in Beirut cooking linguine with snails and rosemary (MEE/Sunniva Rose)
Snails are very low in calories, yet high in protein. According to a 2017 report by the Lebanese University, 100 grams of cooked snails has 70 calories, which is equivalent to one cup of tea.

Snails a la bourguignonne at Le Petit Gris (MEE/Sunniva Rose)
On Rabbath's Mediterranean-style menu, snails are simply advertised a la bourguignonne or snails with tarator. Only true aficionados know that they can ask for their snails to be cooked in different ways any time of the year.

Snail risotto at Le Petit Gris (MEE/Sunniva Rose)
“The Lebanese are not used to eating snails out of season,” recognises Rabbath.

He buys his yearly stock of wild snails, which amounts to one tonne, from seasonal workers in southern Lebanon, who traditionally pick them from under olive and orange trees during the rainy months of the year and sell them on the street. Cooked in his kitchen and frozen, Rabbath’s snails last until the following year. 

Makram Rabbath is owner of Le Petit Gris (MEE/Sunniva Rose)
“During snail season, it’s common for people to sell them on the side of the road. The majority of the snails come from south Lebanon, or from Syria. Syrian snails are farmed, black and extremely big. The Lebanese ones are wild, small and white,” says Rabbath.

Entrepreneur Rami Salman estimates that the street vendors sell around 40 tonnes of snails to locals during snail season.

Snails are also a popular street food in Morocco, but they are cooked with different local spices, including aniseed, liquorice root, thyme, sweet and spicy pepper, mint, bitter orange peel, and crushed gum arabic.

"Snails are popular in North African countries, especially Morocco, where they cook them in a sort of tomato stew," Salman tells Middle East Eye.

The dreary and seemingly uncompassionate cooking process of snails and snail farming has been deemed cruel by animal rights organisations such as PETA. Snails must be purged of anything unhealthy they may have eaten and they are sometimes left to starve for up to a week or more to ensure their digestive tracts are clean. 

Rabbath says that his whole staff (of around 20 ) at Le Petit Gris works for an entire week to de-shell and cook the snails he buys.
 
They are then stored in low temperatures in a refrigerator to slow their nervous processes and ensure they are in a state of hibernation when they are dropped alive in a boiling pot. 

“It’s important for them [to be] in boiling water, so that they are killed immediately. If you put a snail in room temperature water, it won’t die, it will wake up. Then it will start producing slime as a defence mechanism," Salman explains.

A strong demand

Salman believes that snails should be served fresh year round. In 2015, he teamed up with Naufal Daou, a journalist, aspiring politician and general manager of Lebanese Treasure Lands, which runs several snail farms, to help him launch one of the first snail farms in the Bekaa Valley. 

Rami Salman with a snail on his farm in the Bekaa Valley, Lebanon (MEE/Sunniva Rose)
“The local demand exists. One restaurant owner told me that people start calling her asking for snails as soon as it starts raining. They just have to realise that snails can be eaten any time,” argues Salman.

According to the 2017 report by the Lebanese University, snail farming was introduced in Lebanon four years ago.

Empty snail shells in Rami Salman’s kitchen in Hazmieh (MEE/Sunniva Rose)
The country currently has 16 snail farms, which produce around 300 tonnes of snails per year, the report added. Despite long being a traditional delicacy in Lebanon, most of the farmed snails are exported to Italy. 

According to Salman, it's very difficult to estimate how many snails are consumed locally, because the majority of residents either pick the snails from their own gardens or buy them from the street vendors between September and November.

At first, Salman and Daou worked closely with the Istituto Internazionale di Elicicoltura, an international snail breeding institute in Cherasco, Italy.

Snails with scrambled eggs served at Le Petit Gris (MEE/Sunniva Rose)
But Salman and Daou quickly realised that selling on the local market was more profitable than exporting. Although they continued to export snails to Italy through the institute, they started expanding their sales in the local market as well.

According to Salman, on average, one kilo of snails is sold for around 7,000 Lebanese pounds (around $4) a kilo in the local market. To export, farmers have to factor in shipping expenses, insurance, and the snails’ lifespan, in addition to competing with set prices in Europe, which are much lower than the local market, Salman added. That brings down the selling price to 4,500 Lebanese pounds a kilo ($3), according to Salman. 

Snail farming is not a cheap enterprise. Salman invested $250,000 in his 20,000 square metre farm in the first two years of operation (2015-2016) and hopes to break even this year. 

All year long

On his farm, there are roughly two million snails living off a mixture of swiss chard, cabbage and carrots.

A snail on a net on Rami Salman’s farm in the Bekaa Valley (MEE/Sunniva Rose)
Salman farms the snails all year around. Thanks to the dense vegetation, the temperature on the ground stays cool enough for the snails during the summer, when temperatures can reach 40 degrees Celsius during the day. During the winter, the snails hibernate, as they would in natural conditions.

Rami Salman in his kitchen in Hazmieh (MEE/Sunniva Rose)
To process the snails, Salman opened a kitchen last January in Hazmieh, a suburb south-east of Beirut. He sells frozen snails, cooked snail fillets, as well as snails a la bourguignonne

Salman installed a dehumidifier, as high levels of humidity wake up the snails, which are stored in the kitchen’s fridges in an artificial hibernation state - at between three and four degrees Celsius - to facilitate the cooking process.

The snails can typically live for up to several months in hibernation. In this way, they can be cooked fresh depending on demand.

In addition to targeting restaurants, Salman is planning on selling his products to prominent supermarkets. He also hopes to offer snail slime to pharmaceutical companies.

“Snail slime, known for its high concentration in collagen, is used as an additive to face and body creams. Cosmetics are particularly popular with Lebanese women, so that kind of product could work here,” explains Salman. In recent years, there has been a growing interest in slime-based beauty products, especially in Italy and South Korea.

A local start-up incubator, Berytech, is organising a hackathon in a few weeks and Salman has already pitched the idea of a slime extraction machine. He is looking for students who would be able to engineer it.

Empty snail shells and the spices used to cook snails in Rami Salman’s kitchen in Hazmieh (MEE/Sunniva Rose)
According to him, there are only two ways of extracting slime, none of which have been marketed in Lebanon yet: manually, which is labour-intensive and costly, or by spraying salty water on the snails, which is harmful to the animal and generates impure slime mixed with salt.

“A new ozone-based machine has also been developed in Italy, but its estimated cost runs in the tens of thousands of dollars. We’ll see what the Lebanese students come up with,” says Salman.

Alternative uses and high costs

So far, Salman provides 20 restaurants with snails, either cooked or frozen, and delivers them to their doorsteps every week. But according to Salman, many Lebanese restaurants remain reluctant to buy snails out of season, especially as they cost a few cents more per piece than the imported canned ones. 

Samia Massoud’s snails, cooked with butter, garlic, coriander, salt and white and black pepper (MEE/Sunniva Rose)
But Salman is adamant, convinced his advantage lies in his products’ freshness and his flexibility. 

Several adventurous restaurants in Beirut have been testing his products since he opened his kitchen. Samia Massoud, owner of Mum & I, heats up a pack of snail fillets with butter, garlic, coriander, salt, and white and black pepper. “Some clients have already called this morning to order snails for lunch. They specifically asked for them to be cooked a la bourguignonne. I also make it the Lebanese way, with tarator sauce, and I’m thinking of serving them in tarts,” she says.

The owner of Mum & I, Samia Massoud, adds coriander to snails in her restaurant’s kitchen in Beirut (MEE/Sunniva Rose)
Massoud serves approximately 60 servings of snails every week.

“The local demand exists. One restaurant owner told me that people start calling her asking for snails as soon as it starts raining. They just have to realise that snails can be eaten any time,” says Salman

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