An Oregon farm grows one of the most expensive spices in the world

(NOVEMBER 5, 2021) Saffron is a popular spice. It is also used in medicine. But saffron is also very expensive. It can cost $5,000 per pound. That is more expensive than gold. Why? Because it is difficult to harvest.

The spice comes from the dried stigmas of the plant's flower. It can take 75,000 flowers to make one pound of spice. And growers must harvest the flowers by hand, not machine.

Most saffron comes from Iran. But now Tanya Golden grows it in Oregon. Her farm is called Golden Tradition Saffron. It is near North Plains. She started in 2018. She received a grant from the Native American Youth Association Microenterprise Program. It helps small businesses. She also received grants from the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Together with a loan, she started her business.

She has about 400,000 plants in two greenhouses. She uses her aunt's truck. And she has many friends who help her with the harvest.

Golden told The Oregonian newspaper that she cares about more than money. “My business vision isn’t just about saffron and finding a way to become financially stable,” she said. “It’s about finding a way for my community to have that same stability. Because if we’re all stable, we will be stronger and we will last.”


Sources:
Golden Tradition Saffron. (2020, March 16). Golden Tradition Saffron. https://goldentraditionsaffron.org/about/
Peck, D. (2021, November 4). The world’s most expensive spice grows on a farm in North Plains. Oregonlive. https://www.oregonlive.com/hg/2021/11/the-worlds-most-expensive-spice-grows-on-a-farm-in-north-plains.html
Saffron Production. (2020, November 23). CSIR-Indian Institute of Integrative Medicine. https://iiim.res.in/saffron-production/#:~:text=Iran%2C%20India%2C%20Spain%20and%20Greece
Saffron: Uses, Side Effects, Interactions, Dosage, and Warning. (2019). Webmd.com. https://www.webmd.com/vitamins/ai/ingredientmono-844/saffron
Photo and video courtesy of Golden Tradition Saffron
"ESOL News Oregon by Timothy Krause is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0. except where noted.