DISGRACE: Trader Joe’s drops the ‘Israeli’ for its pearl couscous, citing change in supply chain

7

(JTA) – Couscous lovers who frequent the grocery store Trader Joe’s may have noticed a change in the grain aisle: The chain’s brightly colored purple boxes of “Israeli Couscous” are now simply known as “Pearl Couscous.”

Join our WhatsApp group

Subscribe to our Daily Roundup Email


The Nosher, a sister website to the Jewish Telegraphic Agency, first reported the label change after word of it spread on the popular Facebook group Kosher Trader Joe’s.

The move raised questions in the group about whether Trader Joe’s was trying to distance itself from Israel, a move that some companies have made for political reasons. But a spokesperson for the company said it “recently switched to a new supplier for this product and it is now sourced domestically rather than from Israel.” The product itself hasn’t changed, according to The Nosher’s report.

Trader Joe’s carries a host of ingredients and products associated with Israeli cuisine. The company sources its date syrup, called silan in Hebrew, from Belgium and its tahini, a Middle Eastern staple, from Greece. But its Bamba, both regular and chocolate-filled, is sourced from Israel and bears the kosher certification of Israel’s Chief Rabbinate.

Even if the pearl couscous itself is no longer sourced directly from Israel, the method by which it’s prepared is historically Israeli (and is not actually couscous, a semolina product that is North African in origin). The pearl-shaped “ptitim” wheat product came about during a period of intense rationing in Israel in the 1950s, when the country was seeing an influx of more than 700,000 new immigrants. Under orders by Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion, local food manufacturer Osem created a baked wheat-based alternative to rice, unlike its semolina-based “traditional” couscous cousins from North Africa.


Listen to the VINnews podcast on:

iTunes | Spotify | Google Podcasts | Stitcher | Podbean | Amazon

Follow VINnews for Breaking News Updates


Connect with VINnews

Join our WhatsApp group


7 Comments
Most Voted
Newest Oldest
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Rivgold
Rivgold
1 year ago

Just I was shopping online and noticed the osem brand also took out the word Israeli.. it says pearl couscous and under says a unique Mediterranean specialty.. no mention of Israeli

Anonymous
Anonymous
1 year ago

If the product is not anymore made in the Zionist “State” of “Israel” then there is no reason to expect that name on the label.

True, they could write “Israeli-style” or the like. But they don’t have to, and it is silly and childish to call that “DISGRACEFUL”.

Sounds like a nothingburger
Sounds like a nothingburger
1 year ago

Nothingburger

Charles B Hall
Charles B Hall
1 year ago

It might even be illegal to call something “Israeli” when it isn’t from Israel.

Was it?
Was it?
1 year ago

Maybe because of shmittah?