A RASH of shops selling plant-based products under the guise of animal fare may persuade Spaniards to cut back on meat consumption, though it promises to be an uphill battle, writes Heather Galloway.
While the Spanish meat industry is getting in a stew over the suggestion we might reduce our meat consumption for the good of the planet, vegan butchers are mushrooming across the country with clever imitations of Spainโs favourite meat-based delicacies, such as spiced sausage (chorizo), black pudding (morcilla), meat balls (albondigas), and a version of Iberico ham in the pipeline.
In fact, fake meat has become so convincing that when three-Michelin -star chef, Ferran Adriร was asked by the Dutch Vegetarian Butcher boss Jaap Korteweg to sample one of his concoctions back in 2011, the unsuspecting culinary legend reportedly declared, โIt is a chicken leg. Probably organic or from chickens raised in the south of France.โ
One of the thorns in the side of the Spanish meat industry has been precisely the use of names associated with meat for fake-meat products. In September, ultra right party Vox came up with a proposal in Spainโs parliament to ban the use of the word sausage and meat ball โalbondiga in Spanish โ for vegan variations on these themes.

But Eduardo Gonzรกlez, co-founder of Compasiรณn (pictured above), the vegan butcher that set up this summer in the trendy Malasaรฑa district of Madrid, believes this is absurd. โWhen sausages were first on the market, they were made of pig,โ he says. โWhen they started to produce tuna sausages, nobody questioned that they were โsausagesโ. But if we make them with pumpkin or tofu, that is questioned. In fact, itโs not the names they are taking issue with; what bugs them is that we are not part of the merciless food system and customs that exists in Spain.โ

Compasiรณn makes its own products, the result of nine years of experimenting in a country where only 20 years ago, like the classic Monty Python spam sketch, no dish would be complete without ham and pigs ears were a staple in tapas bars.
Meat in Spain is considered nothing short of sacred. According to Greenpeaceโs head of the agro-ecological division, Luis Ferreirim, โSpaniards are the biggest meat eaters in Europe. Last year, 910 million animals were slaughtered, which is more than the entire population of the EU; thatโs 1,700 animals a minute. Here, we eat an average of 250 grams of meat a day when our weekly quota for a balanced diet should be 300 grams, according to scientists.โ
But, when it comes to health, itโs veganism thatโs called into question. As Luis points out, โPeople always point out the deficiencies of a vegan diet. The lack of B12. But they never question the deficiencies that come with a meat-heavy diet which misses out on all the vitamins supplied by plant-based foods.โ
Paradoxically, some dyed in the wool meat-eaters end up at the vegan butcher. According to Kevin Mendoza, one of the co-founders of Vegalona in Barcelona, while most of their clientele are between 30 and 50, he does get a number of elderly customers who have been told by their doctors to find an alternative to meat. โThey donโt want to,โ he says, โSo having something that tastes and smells and has the same texture as meat is great for them. Itโs part of the protein transition.โ
In the โprotein transition,โ the UK is streets ahead of Spain whose meat consumption measured by the Ministry of Agriculture actually went up 10.2% in the past year fuelling the intensive livestock farming boom. Only 1.3% of Spaniards are either vegan or vegetarian, according to the Lantern Papers, compared to more than 10% in the UK. โWe seem to be cutting edge when it comes to LGBTQ+ rights,โ says Eduardo. โBut in terms of avoiding meat, we lag pretty far behind.โ
Not surprising then that the meat industry is Spainโs fourth economic engine and accounts for 14.5% of Spainโs greenhouse emissions, prompting the countryโs Minister of Consumer Affairs, Alberto Garzรณn, to stick his neck out in July to suggest the population curb its carnivorous urges.
Illustrating the clout of the meat-industryโs lobby, the following day, socialist Prime Minister Pedro Sรกnchez appeared on the news, telling Spaniards that he liked a T-bone steak as much as the next man. โWhenever I am served a T-bone steak cooked to perfection, itโs unbeatable,โ he beamed, swiftly backtracking on his Garzรณnโs courageous stance.
โHe was certainly given a prod from the meat lobby,โ says Pilar Cervera, owner of Green Meat in San Sebastian in the Basque Country โ the first vegan butcher shop in Spain that set up seven years ago. โBut the world is changing and the meat industry will have to adapt.โ

Kevin Mendoza of Vegalona believes some in the meat industry are doing just that, with 20% of their investment now being ploughed into plant-based products. This, he says, has been particularly notable in the past year.
Of course, it doesnโt have to be all or nothing. With Cop 26 looming, Prince Charles, for example, urged the British public to do their bit to stall climate change by taking a leaf out of his book. โFor years, I havenโt eaten meat and fish on two days a week and I donโt eat dairy products on one day a week,โ he told the BBC at the start of October. โIf more did that, you would reduce a lot of the pressure.โ
Like Prince Charles, Luis from Greenpeace does not believe meat has to be off the menu entirely. โWe need a return to the Mediterranean diet when red meat was at the top of the pyramid and the bottom was plant-based,โ he says. โEating meat should be occasional.โ
Vegan butchers could well play a significant role in weaning people off meat just as the sellers of herbal cigarettes have helped some to give up smoking. But none of these butchers themselves are under the illusion veganism will take off over night. โWe wonโt be around to see the battle against the meat industry won,โ says Pilar from Green Meat. โMaybe our children will. But at least weโve planted the seed.โ

Down the road from Compasiรณn in Madrid, the man behind the counter at the chicken shop is unaware thereโs even a war on. โPeople will always eat chicken,โ he tells me. Then, with a glint in his eye familiar to vegans everywhere, he adds, โThe people who want to eat that stuff instead of chicken are strange folk.โ
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