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FOOD AND DRINK

Spain’s 3,000-year-old tuna fishing tradition

As the sun rises in the Gulf of Cádiz on Spain's southern tip, a team of fishermen lifts the tip of a vast system of nets with bluefin tuna trapped inside.

Spain's 3,000-year-old tuna fishing tradition
A bluefin tuna is lifted out of the water using the ancient fishing technique of almadraba in Spain. Photo: JORGE GUERRERO / AFP

“Hoist!” they cry before men in wetsuits jump into the water to deliver a final blow to the fish captured using this 3,000-year-old netting tradition.

Dubbed an “almadraba“, the system of nets is designed to catch large bluefin tuna during their annual migration from the Atlantic into the warmer Mediterranean to lay their eggs.

The nets form a series of chambers that trap only the biggest of the migrating tuna.

The tuna are “practically like bulls” and their blows are like “the kick from a horse,” said the captain of the fishing boat, 61-year-old Antonio Ponce.

Tuna have been caught in this stretch of water using this method since the Phoenicians ruled the Mediterranean from around 1,200 BC.

Use of the technique in Spain almost disappeared in the 1970s due to a lack of profitability, but demand for quality tuna from Japan breathed new life into the sector.

READ ALSO: What to order at a restaurant in each region of Spain

Over 1,600 tonnes of bluefin tuna are caught annually off the coast of Spain’s southern province of Cádiz using the “almadraba” technique.

Two divers swim next to a bluefin tuna, killed by shooting an underwater gun straight to its head. Photo: JORGE GUERRERO / AFP

Around 500 fishermen in Cádiz use the system, according to the Almadraba Producers’ and Fishermen’s Organisation (OPP51).

Aside from Spain, the technique is only found in Italy, Morocco and Portugal.

‘Sustainable technique’

Because the nets only catch the biggest tuna, it is a “sustainable technique,” said José Luis García Varas of the Spanish branch of the World Wildlife Fund (WWF).

In the early 2000s, the global popularity of sushi put bluefin tuna in danger, but the establishment of regional fishing quotas allowed the species to recover.

Atlantic bluefin tuna was in 2021 moved from the category of “endangered” to that of “least concern” by the International Union for Conservation of Nature.

In Spain, the Japanese taught local fishermen to minimise the stress endured by the tuna to improve the taste of the meat.

READ ALSO – Mediterranean diet: Why the Spanish are eating far less fish

Fishermen now use a sawn-off shotgun called a “lupara” to kill the tuna instantly.

While the structure of the nets “has remained more or less the same for many years,” what has changed is “the way of treating the fish to achieve quality, to take away their suffering,” said Ponce.

The Japanese also taught locals how to consume parts of the tuna which were previously thrown away – and got them to eat raw fish.

Bluefin tuna “has 25 parts, 25 textures, 25 tastes. They were not known before,” said Julio Vázquez, the 43-year-old head chef at the El Campero restaurant in the coastal town of Barbate.

His menu includes 32 different dishes using bluefin tuna.

“When my mother or my grandmother cooked, there was not so much diversity,” he added.

The Spanish chef specialising in bluefin tuna Julio Vázquez prepares a tuna dish at his restaurant El Campero, in Barbate. Photo: JORGE GUERRERO / AFP
‘Delicacy’

Vázquez recalled that the bestselling Spanish cookbook 1080 Recipes by the late culinary author Simone Ortega had only one tuna recipe – for a gratin using tinned tuna.

While 80 percent of the tuna caught in Cádiz used to go to Japan, now 70 percent is sold in Spain and just 30 percent heads to Asia, according to OPP51.

Thousands of people head to Cádiz – a region of whitewashed houses and sandy beaches – to eat bluefin tuna caught using the “almadraba” technique.

The tiny resort town of Zahara de los Atunes – named after the tuna – holds an annual festival dedicated to the fish. Last year its bars and restaurants served 105,000 tapas during the four days of the event, according to the town hall.

“Here is all about freshness,” said Noah G. White, a 23-year-old chef visiting from Sweden, who asked for Vázquez’s autograph after eating at his restaurant.

“You can eat it raw and that is for me a delicacy in itself,” he added.

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DISCOVER SPAIN

Flamenco, horses and sherry: Jerez’s Feria del Caballo

The swish of a flamenco skirt, the soft beat of hooves drumming on the roads and the smell of sweet sherry, these are the senses you'll experience at Jerez de la Frontera’s Feria del Caballo in May, a worthy alternative to Seville's busy April Fair.

Flamenco, horses and sherry: Jerez's Feria del Caballo

There’s nothing quite so Andalusian as attending a local feria or festival, comprising all the elements you’d expect from this quintessential area of Spain – flamenco, horses and lots of food and drink.

While the most famous feria is Seville’s Feria de Abril, it may not actually be the best place to experience your first one. This is primarily because in Seville, visitors are not allowed to enter many of the so-called casetas (tents or marquees) where the main events such as music and dancing take place.

These are reserved for private companies or are by invitation only. By visiting the Feria del Caballo in Jerez de la Frontera instead, you’ll be able to enter almost all the casetas for free and not have to worry about jostling for space with so many other tourists, as it’s mainly locals who attend.

Horses wait in the shade at the Feria del Caballo in Jerez. Photo: Esme Fox

Jerez lies approximately 90km south of Seville and is renowned throughout the country for three things – horses, flamenco and sherry. It forms one point of the famed Sherry Triangle, where the majority of Spain’s sherry or jerez is produced and is also home to the prestigious Real Escuela Andaluza del Arte Ecuestre (Royal Andalusian School of Equestrian Art). This is where some of Spain’s most talented horses perform and dance with their riders.

READ ALSO: The surprising connection between Spanish sherry and the British and Irish

While the town also holds a sherry festival and a flamenco festival, the Feria del Caballo is where all three elements are brought together.

This year the Feria del Caballo takes place from May 4th to the 11th, 2024. Like previous years the main fair will take place in the Parque González Hontoria, just north of the city centre.

Traditional trajes de flamenco in Jerez. Photo: Esme Fox
 

During the day time, there are several dressage competitions taking place, then as late afternoon and evening draws near, the whole town heads to the fairground for an evening of partying and drinking.

Everyone dons their traditional trajes de flamenco or flamenco costumes, and horse-drawn carriages take revellers for rides along the dusty streets, lined with casetas, decorations and barrels of sherry.

By night the whole fairground is aglow with twinkly multicoloured lights. Flamenco music blares from each caseta and everyone shows off their Sevillanas moves. Sevillanas is a traditional folk dance from the region of Seville, which could be mistaken for flamenco to the untrained eye.

Jerez’s Feria del Caballo by night. Photo: Esme Fox

The order of the day is a rebujito, the feria’s classic tipple which is a mixture of sherry and lemonade. It might not sound great, but it can get quite addictive.

Next to the park, which has been turned into a mini festival city within itself is a traditional funfair complete with rides such as twirling tea cups and bumper cars, as well as games from coconut shys to fishing for plastic ducks and mock shooting ranges.

Dressage competition at the Feria del Caballo in Jerez. Photo: Esme Fox

The history of the Feria del Caballo goes back over 500 years. In 1264 Alfonso X granted the town two annual duty-free fairs, one in April and the other in September/October. By the Middle Ages, this turned into commercial livestock fairs that took place around the same months. 

However, it wasn’t until 1955 when the Domecq Sherry family came up with the idea of a festival focused on the city’s connections with horses.

Today, Jerez de la Frontera offers one of the best places to experience a typical Andalusian feria

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