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- Real saffron can cost over $10,000 per kilo, and there are various reasons why it is so.
- Reason 1: It takes 150 flowers to make 1 gram of saffron.
- Saffron is the red strands that grow at the center of the Crocus Sativus plant’s flower.
- Each flower has just 3 of these strands, and it takes 150,000 flowers (450,000 strands) to produce 1 kg of saffron.
- Reason 2: It takes 40 hours of manual labor to get 1 kg of saffron.
- All flowers are handpicked, and no machine can be used to harvest the delicate threads.
- Reason 3: Saffron plants don’t grow easily & the yield is very low.
- One acre (about 43,000 square feet) of land yields around 1.8 kg of saffron.
- For comparison, the same land space can yield over 1000 kg of coriander or 600 kg of cumin or 350 kg of nutmeg.
- The plant is incapable of sexual reproduction, i.e., the plant doesn’t grow through pollination (insects transferring pollen from the male part of the flower to the female part).
- So, manual vegetative multiplication is necessary to produce offspring.
- Reason 4: It is one of the most counterfeited or adulterated spices.
- The popularised health benefits such as saffron being anti-cancerous, good for memory, etc., have led to demand far higher than the production.
- Because of this, adulteration and production of fake saffron are widespread – corn silk, shredded coconut fibers, and horsehair are commonly used as fake saffron.
- In 2010, Spain exported 190,000 kg of saffron worth $50 million, but the country’s total production was only 1500 kg, so most of this export was fake.
- In 2019, fake saffron worth $1 million was uncovered in the UK.
- Faking & adulteration and high exclusivity help the spice deliver on the rarity principle (refers to a situation when a lot of people know about a brand/product but very few can access it) perfectly, making it even more coveted.
Image courtesy of Mohammad Amiri through Unsplash