We have a variety of fresh vegetables, fruit, meats, and fish, standing proud on Maltese shelves. We have a good number of farms who are certified to organic standards, and others whose brand position rests on benefits such as assurances that pesticides and antimicrobials have not been used.
We have Michelin-starred restaurants who use Maltese olives, mazzit, honey, pork, kirxa, and Jerusalem artichokes to reimagine traditional dishes and give them a modern twist.
We have fresh food markets, where people can buy directly from farmers and fishermen. We have candidate foods, waiting to be recognised as products of origin or of traditional specialty.
We have our olive oil, our zalzett tal-Malti, our craft beers, our qubbajt, kunserva, our cheeses, our ħalib tal-Benna, Russell Crowe’s preferred pastizzi, and we have jaw-dropping scenic places that melt away your mind’s stress and are great for Instagram.
We have quality. It is only logical, then, that our next step would be to prove it, because it is one thing to declare that as a local farm or business, you offer genuine food and experiences, and another to offer customers the guarantees they need to know that what they are paying for is truly authentic. It is the real thing. That is why in building a new brand of Maltese ‘biotrails’ and ‘biodistricts’, we are introducing and implementing certification.
As part of the project, we shall be supporting participants to become certified to internationally recognised standards of traceability and, wherever possible, to organic standards, and we take this opportunity to invite all those farms, food processors, and operators in the HoReCa sector who are interested to participate in this project to get in touch by sending an email on
foodsystems.mafa@gov.mt.
If there’s one sure thing about the Food Systems Directorate other than it is a relatively young brand, it is that in the work we do, we collaborate with others.