Saudi Arabia’s Qassim unearthing economic opportunities with white truffles

Qassim Gov. Prince Faisal bin Mishaal expressed his pride in the diversity of festivals, saying that the truffle festival was response to the desire of farmers and others as it was cultivated seasonally. (SPA)
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Updated 30 January 2022
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Saudi Arabia’s Qassim unearthing economic opportunities with white truffles

  • Saudi Arabia is famous for its white truffles grown in spacious desert in the country’s central region

JEDDAH: Truffles evoke luxury and expense. Rare and delectable, they can be found in dishes at fine dining restaurants, in specialty food stores, or nestled in a corner of the exotic produce section at some supermarkets.

Truffles are touted as one of the most expensive food items because they are seasonal, found underground in remote areas during the wet winter season, and are difficult to cultivate as they grow naturally without any farming process.
Saudi Arabia is famous for its white truffles grown in spacious desert in the country’s central region, specifically in Qassim, which is approximately 400 km northwest of Riyadh.

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Truffles are touted as one of the most expensive food items because they are seasonal, found underground in remote areas during the wet winter season, and are difficult to cultivate as they grow naturally without any farming process.

Every year during the winter season Saudi truffle hunters, collectors, and farmers from around the country flock to deserts or their farms to hunt for big white truffles, known locally as zbaidi, to show them off, cook them, or sell them at local auctions.
Each zbaidi weighs between 10 and 400 grams. It has a smooth or dusty surface as it grows in the dirt, and a soft body that breaks easily. It is the most popular and in-demand type of truffle in Saudi Arabia and the wider Gulf Cooperation Council region.
The municipal administration office of Shari, in Qassim, organized a five-day truffle festival from Jan. 25 - 30. 
The festival’s aim was to gather local farmers and truffle collectors under one roof to promote the place as a tourist destination and develop the truffle industry for economic opportunities.
It has 12 truffle booths and an auction area for truffles grown in more than 15 participating farms, in addition to other Qassimi products such as dates and honey.
Qassim Gov. Prince Faisal bin Mishaal bin Saud bin Abdulaziz said during his visit to the event that the diversity of festivals and agricultural products had become a feature of the region. 
“Such festivals promote the region as an economic destination (to visit) from all regions of the Kingdom,” he said, according to a Saudi Press Agency report.
He also expressed his pride in the diversity of festivals and agricultural products to come out of the region, saying the truffle festival came in response to the desire of farmers and those interested in this product as it was cultivated seasonally.
Qassim has 25 farms for cultivating truffles, each with an average 1,000 hectares, and the produce is worth up to SR50 million ($13.33 million), making it an attractive business opportunity for investors.
This season supported farmers on a grand scale, with truffle prices reaching more than SR1,000 per kilo. Youssif Al-Mutlag, the owner of the biggest truffle farms in the Kingdom located in Qassim, described himself as a huge truffle fan, hunter, and collector. His passion for truffles drove him to become the first, best, and biggest truffle farm owner in Saudi Arabia and the GCC.
His farm is open to all on weekdays during the day. Visitors can access the farm in their cars by paying $266.50 (per vehicle) to enjoy the weather, camp, and collect truffles.
“My farm is open for visitors from around the Kingdom and the world to enjoy collecting truffles, as much as they can find,” he told Arab News. “Hunting truffles is a fun activity where you have to go for a long walk on spacious land, which is really good for the body. It is a sport, a tradition, and a joyful activity. All that you need is patience, a good eye for (the) Raqrouq plant, a screwdriver to pull it out of the dirt, and you are good to go.”
He also talked about the health benefits and nutritional value of truffles.
“Ancient Arabs used to depend on truffles as a great source of protein, fats, and minerals, and as a replacement for meat. So, once it is truffle season, prices of meat used to go lower than normal days.”
Saudis like fresh zbaidi truffles as they use them in many traditional winter recipes.
Truffles belong to the fungi family called Terfeziaceae and they appear after rainfall in the winter season in certain areas. They come in spherical shapes and different tones such as light or dark brown, blackish or white.
Al-Mutlag said: “Truffles grow symmetrically with the Raqrouq plant, its scientific name is Helianthemum Kahiricum connected to its roots. There are many types of truffles, including khalasi that has a dark red color and a hard crust, and the other type is zbaidi in white, which has a distinctive smell, taste, size, and shape.”
There is also a rare type of truffle, jabba, which has a distinctive black color and is the most expensive type as it is dried and used in dishes at fine dining restaurants.
“These types are determined by the land and soil but it grows more likely in uncultivated stony land,” he said, adding that investing in truffle cultivation was a win-win situation. “The truffle industry is a successful trade as the income rate can reach 200 percent.”


‘A goal scored. A performance seen. A moment shared.’: How ‘play’ is at the heart of Qiddiya City’s vision

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‘A goal scored. A performance seen. A moment shared.’: How ‘play’ is at the heart of Qiddiya City’s vision

  • Morgan Parker of Qiddiya Investment Company spoke to Arab News about the integrated city cenetred on sport, entertainment and culture

RIYADH: About 40km outside Riyadh, a new city is taking shape, guided by a long-term urban vision that places people, experience, and quality of life at its center.

Qiddiya City will span more than 360 square kilometres (three times the size of Paris) and is being developed as a fully integrated city centered on sport, entertainment, and culture. It will be home to more than 500,000 residents, welcome millions of domestic and international visitors annually, and support more than 200,000 jobs in leisure, tourism, creative industries, and business.

But for Morgan Parker, vice chair of the management committee at Qiddiya Investment Company, the ambition of the city is best understood through a single idea.

“At its heart, Qiddiya City is about play,” Parker said on the Flavors of Ambition podcast. “Not just entertainment but play as something deeply human, something that drives wellbeing, creativity, and connection.

“Some of the most powerful memories in life are experiences. A goal scored. A performance seen. A moment shared with others.”

Qiddiya City, he explained, is designed to create the conditions for those moments to happen at scale, and over generations.

“Imagine a whole city dedicated to facilitating those experiences,” Parker said. “That’s what we’re building.”

Six Flags Qiddiya City is now open, featuring 28 rides, including the world-record-breaking Falcon’s Flight, set dramatically against the Tuwaiq cliffs. Aquarabia, the region’s largest water theme park, is scheduled to open soon, alongside world-class film studios and the Sir Nick Faldo-designed Qiddiya City Golf Course, built around an inclusive “three sixes” format designed to lower barriers to participation.

Major sports infrastructure is also advancing. The Speed Park Track, a landmark motorsports facility, will host global racing events including a Formula One Grand Prix, while a state-of-the-art horse racing venue is under development.

The Prince Mohammed bin Salman Stadium will stage top-tier football and entertainment events, including matches at the 2034 FIFA World Cup. Elsewhere, a world-first gaming and e-sports district is set to redefine one of the fastest-growing global industries.

Beyond attractions, Qiddiya City is being developed as a real place to live. More than 20 neighbourhoods will offer apartments, townhouses, villas, and branded residences, supported by more than 30 educational facilities, world-class healthcare, 120-plus hotels, vibrant retail streets, and a connected business hub.

“This is the chance to do something that isn’t encumbered by legacy,” Parker said. “So many great cities around the world are constantly having to reinvent themselves around their own histories. Here, we can plan a city from scratch, using everything we’ve learned over millennia, and everything we’ve learned in the digital age, and bake that into the blueprint from day one.”

Rather than retrofitting solutions later, sustainability, smart-city technology, mobility, and lifestyle considerations are embedded from the outset. This includes future high-speed rail connectivity linking Qiddiya City to King Salman International Airport in about 30 minutes and to KAFD in 17 minutes, alongside a dedicated metro line with eight stations.

One of the most common questions Parker is asked reveals a basic misunderstanding of what the city is intended to be: when will Qiddiya City be finished?

“I always answer by asking where the person is from,” he said. “London? New York? Dubai? And then I ask: Is that city finished? They don’t finish. They reinvent themselves. They adapt to society’s needs.”

That thinking, for Parker, shapes how Qiddiya City is being built.

“This is not a project,” he said. “It’s an initiative. What I like to call a ‘giga-initiative’. Projects have an end date. Cities don’t. Qiddiya City is being designed to evolve over generations.”

Historically, cities were defined by geography — ports, rivers, trade routes — and built around the exchange of goods, services, or finance. Qiddiya City represents a different model.

“This is a new genre of city,” Parker said. “One that isn’t centered on trading goods or finance, but on trading experiences.”

As global mobility increases, Parker believes the most successful cities will be those that are deliberate about what they stand for.

“It’s OK not to be everything to everyone,” he said. “The places that thrive are the ones that double down on what they do best.”

For Qiddiya City, that focus is clear.

“New York is known for finance. Paris for art and culture. San Francisco for technology,” Parker said. “Qiddiya City is positioning itself around experiences. If you work in sport, entertainment, or culture, why wouldn’t this be a place where you create, innovate, or bring your team?”