Truffle festival in Riyadh showcases desert delicacy

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Desert Truffle Festival visitors were offered the chance to taste and buy truffle products, take part in workshops and competitions, and watch live music and cooking demonstrations. (AN Photo/Huda Bashatah)
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Yousef Al-Mutlaq, a Saudi farmer with more than 14 truffle-harvesting projects in the Kingdom, took part in the event by demonstrating to guests how to gather truffles in the desert. (AN Photo/Huda Bashatah)
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Desert Truffle Festival visitors were offered the chance to taste and buy truffle products, take part in workshops and competitions, and watch live music and cooking demonstrations. (AN Photo/Huda Bashatah)
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Desert Truffle Festival visitors were offered the chance to taste and buy truffle products, take part in workshops and competitions, and watch live music and cooking demonstrations. (AN Photo/Huda Bashatah)
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Desert Truffle Festival visitors were offered the chance to taste and buy truffle products, take part in workshops and competitions, and watch live music and cooking demonstrations. (AN Photo/Huda Bashatah)
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Desert Truffle Festival visitors were offered the chance to taste and buy truffle products, take part in workshops and competitions, and watch live music and cooking demonstrations. (AN Photo/Huda Bashatah)
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Desert Truffle Festival visitors were offered the chance to taste and buy truffle products, take part in workshops and competitions, and watch live music and cooking demonstrations. (AN Photo/Huda Bashatah)
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Desert Truffle Festival visitors were offered the chance to taste and buy truffle products, take part in workshops and competitions, and watch live music and cooking demonstrations. (AN Photo/Huda Bashatah)
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Desert Truffle Festival visitors were offered the chance to taste and buy truffle products, take part in workshops and competitions, and watch live music and cooking demonstrations. (AN Photo/Huda Bashatah)
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Desert Truffle Festival visitors were offered the chance to taste and buy truffle products, take part in workshops and competitions, and watch live music and cooking demonstrations. (AN Photo/Huda Bashatah)
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Desert Truffle Festival visitors were offered the chance to taste and buy truffle products, take part in workshops and competitions, and watch live music and cooking demonstrations. (AN Photo/Huda Bashatah)
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Desert Truffle Festival visitors were offered the chance to taste and buy truffle products, take part in workshops and competitions, and watch live music and cooking demonstrations. (AN Photo/Huda Bashatah)
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Desert Truffle Festival visitors were offered the chance to taste and buy truffle products, take part in workshops and competitions, and watch live music and cooking demonstrations. (AN Photo/Huda Bashatah)
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Desert Truffle Festival visitors were offered the chance to taste and buy truffle products, take part in workshops and competitions, and watch live music and cooking demonstrations. (AN Photo/Huda Bashatah)
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Desert Truffle Festival visitors were offered the chance to taste and buy truffle products, take part in workshops and competitions, and watch live music and cooking demonstrations. (AN Photo/Huda Bashatah)
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Desert Truffle Festival visitors were offered the chance to taste and buy truffle products, take part in workshops and competitions, and watch live music and cooking demonstrations. (AN Photo/Huda Bashatah)
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Desert Truffle Festival visitors were offered the chance to taste and buy truffle products, take part in workshops and competitions, and watch live music and cooking demonstrations. (AN Photo/Huda Bashatah)
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Desert Truffle Festival visitors were offered the chance to taste and buy truffle products, take part in workshops and competitions, and watch live music and cooking demonstrations. (AN Photo/Huda Bashatah)
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Desert Truffle Festival visitors were offered the chance to taste and buy truffle products, take part in workshops and competitions, and watch live music and cooking demonstrations. (AN Photo/Huda Bashatah)
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Desert Truffle Festival visitors were offered the chance to taste and buy truffle products, take part in workshops and competitions, and watch live music and cooking demonstrations. (AN Photo/Huda Bashatah)
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Desert Truffle Festival visitors were offered the chance to taste and buy truffle products, take part in workshops and competitions, and watch live music and cooking demonstrations. (AN Photo/Huda Bashatah)
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Desert Truffle Festival visitors were offered the chance to taste and buy truffle products, take part in workshops and competitions, and watch live music and cooking demonstrations. (AN Photo/Huda Bashatah)
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Updated 07 March 2023
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Truffle festival in Riyadh showcases desert delicacy

  • Organized by the Saudi Culinary Arts Commission in the capital’s Irqah district, the Desert Truffle Festival showcased the latest developments in the sector
  • The event highlighted the diversity of truffles — the fruiting body of a subterranean ascomycete fungus and considered a delicacy — found throughout the Kingdom

RIYADH: Farmers, retailers, chefs, and foodies recently attended a truffle fair in Riyadh as part of a celebration of Saudi Arabia’s culinary heritage.

Organized by the Saudi Culinary Arts Commission in the capital’s Irqah district, the Desert Truffle Festival showcased the latest developments in the sector.

The event highlighted the diversity of truffles — the fruiting body of a subterranean ascomycete fungus and considered a delicacy — found throughout the Kingdom.

Among those taking part was Yousef Al-Mutlaq, a Saudi farmer with more than a dozen harvesting projects, who demonstrated how truffles were gathered from the desert.

He told Arab News: “The truffle is a bacterial interaction between the ground and the tree called Al-Raqooq. The type of truffle varies according to the soil. In mountainous areas, the truffle appears in a white color called zubaidi, but if the soil is sandy, the truffle is reddish and called khulas.

“Al-Jabaa truffles come from land mixed between clay and mountainous soil,” he said.

Truffles expert, Mohammed Al-Enazi, was present with his own collection.

He said: “After it rains, the truffles grow in the desert, and people go there to pick and sell them. It is pricey because everyone enjoys it, and we are glad to be at this festival where we can meet those consumers and link the farmers.”

Festival visitors were offered the chance to taste and buy truffle products, take part in workshops and competitions, and watch live music and cooking demonstrations.

Maha Al-Shammari, who has gathered truffles from a young age, said: “I wanted to participate in the truffle festival by introducing truffles and their seasonal and agricultural types, and the cleaning and preservation methods.

“We also roast truffles with butter for visitors who would like a taste. Since I was young, one of my hobbies has been to cut truffles, and over the years I have learned when they sprout and the best time to pick them.”

Saudi firm Shovel Roaster produced a special festival truffle latte, served in a bowl rather than a cup.

Company executive manager, Mutlaq Al-Shalahi, said: “We enjoy developing new goods, so we wanted to bring something fresh to the festival. We created a truffle latte, mixing milk with truffle powder. The product was well-received by more than 300 visitors who tried it.”

Other businesses also created Saudi fusion recipes for the event, such as kabsa with truffles, truffle marqooq, and dyaft fouziah.

The festival provided a platform for Saudi businesses and entrepreneurs to showcase their products and services while also promoting the Kingdom’s burgeoning culinary industry.


Saudi House kicks off Davos with push on Vision 2030, AI platform and ‘humanizing’ tourism

At Saudi House, ministers and executives set out how the Kingdom sees the next phase of its transformation. (Supplied)
Updated 20 January 2026
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Saudi House kicks off Davos with push on Vision 2030, AI platform and ‘humanizing’ tourism

  • Saudi ministers dominate pre-summit spotlight at Saudi pavilion, touting Vision 2030’s next phase and human capital as key to global edge
  • Ministry of Economy and Planning announced the SUSTAIN Platform which aims to accelerate AI-enabled, cross-sector collaboration for sustainable development

DAVOS: For regulars at the World Economic Forum, Monday in Davos is usually a chance to ease into the week, a time to reconnect, plan meetings and prepare for the intense schedule ahead.

This year, Saudi Arabia moved quickly to fill that lull, taking center stage with a packed program of panels ahead of Tuesday’s official opening.

At the Saudi House — the Kingdom’s official pavilion on the Promenade, returning after its debut as a standalone venue at the 2025 WEF Annual Meeting — Saudi ministers and global executives set out how the Kingdom sees the next phase of its transformation.

Monday’s speakers at the Saudi House included Minister of Finance Mohammed Al-Jadaan, Minister of Investment Khalid Al-Falih, Minister of Tourism Ahmed Al-Khateeb, and President and Vice Chairman of Meta Dina Powell McCormick. (Supplied)

Established by the Ministry of Economy and Planning, the venue is pitched as a platform for international thought leaders to tackle the challenges, opportunities and solutions shaping the global economy.

Opening a session on the Kingdom’s role at this year’s Forum and the next phase of Vision 2030 — now in its 10th year and roughly two-thirds complete — Princess Reema bint Bandar, Saudi Arabia’s ambassador to the US, said human capital “is the actual driver if you want a competitive, modern economy.”

She described one of the biggest achievements of the past decade as the emergence of a highly qualified cohort of young Saudis who could work anywhere in the world but “choose to come home, choose to build at home and choose to deliver at home,” calling this “the biggest symbol of the success of Vision 2030.”

Who can give you optimum access to opportunities while addressing risks? I contend that Saudi Arabia has been able to provide that formula.

Khalid Al-Falih, Saudi minister of investment

On the same panel, Minister of Finance Mohammed Aljadaan said this success is rooted in a “behavioral change” that has strengthened the Kingdom’s credibility with both international partners and its own citizens.

“Credibility comes from being very pragmatic, making sure that you maintain your fiscal policy discipline, but at the same time refocus your resources where it matters,” he said, warning that “markets will call your bluff if you’re not serious.”

The Saudi House, a cross-ministerial initiative led by the Ministry of Economy and Planning, is intended to underscore the Kingdom’s “commitment to global cooperation” by offering “a platform where visionary ideas are shared and shaped,” while showcasing opportunities and lessons from its “unprecedented national transformation.”

Lubna Olayan, Chair of the Corporate Board, Olayan Group

Echoing earlier comments to Arab News, Economy and Planning Minister Faisal Alibrahim said the Kingdom’s role as an anchor of stability has helped unlock its potential, stressing that while the objective is to decouple from reliance on a single commodity, “2030 is not the finishing line.”

Khalid Al-Falih, Saudi minister of investment, said Saudi Arabia has been able to enable access to opportunities while addressing major risks, arguing that few countries can match the Kingdom’s overall mix.

“No country has all of those to 100 percent,” he said. “But who can give you the mix that gives you optimum access to opportunities while addressing all of those risks?

Dr. Bedour Alrayes, Deputy CEO, Human Capability Development Program, Saudi Arabia

“I contend that Saudi Arabia has been able to provide that formula and the proof is in the pudding,” noting that local investment has doubled in recent years to reach levels comparable with India and China.

While societal transformation dominated the morning discussions, the afternoon turned to technology, tourism, sport and culture, four strategic sectors expected to spearhead Vision 2030’s next phase.

The Ministry of Economy and Planning used the day to announce the SUSTAIN Platform, due to launch in 2026, which aims to accelerate AI-enabled, cross-sector collaboration for sustainable development.

The ministry said SUSTAIN will translate the Kingdom’s public and private-sector coordination mandate into a practical national tool to help government entities, businesses, investors, academia and civil society identify credible partners, form trusted coalitions and move initiatives “from planning to implementation more efficiently,” addressing a global challenge where fragmented partnerships often slow delivery and blunt impact.

“We are in a moment in time where technology may well impact the face of humanity,” said Dina Powell McCormick, recently appointed president and vice chairman of Meta, welcoming the Kingdom’s “desire” to partner with technology companies and its embrace of innovation.

Minister of Tourism Ahmed Alkhateeb, discussing how technology is being deployed in his sector, underlined that “in travel and tourism, people are very important. We learn about other people’s culture through interacting with people. We digitalize the unnecessary and humanize the necessary.”

He added that while technological transformation is a priority, “we don’t want to replace this big workforce with technology. I think we need to protect them in Saudi Arabia, where we’re being a model. I’m an advocate of keeping the people.”

Throughout the week, Saudi House will host more than 20 sessions, including over 10 accredited by the WEF, across six themes: Bold Vision, Insights for Impact, People and Human Capability, Quality of Life, Investment and Collaboration, and Welcoming the World.

The pavilion will also launch “NextOn,” a new series of influential and educational talks featuring leading global voices.