http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/home/soccer-halal-and-caviar-home-comforts-at-the-world-cup/380623

June 15, 2010 

 
the Algerian team pose before their Group C first round 2010 World Cup football 
match on June 13, 2010 at Peter Mokaba stadium in Polokwane. (AFP Photo)

Soccer, Halal and Caviar, Home Comforts at The World Cup

Port Elizabeth. Halal for the Algerians, tubs of caviar for any wandering WAGS 
- South Africa is pushing the boat out to ensure its VIP World Cup guests don't 
feel homesick.

Algeria, first round rivals for England, are based in the four-star Mondazur 
Resort Estate hotel at the San Lameer golf complex on the KwaZulu-Natal south 
coast.

And to make the Desert Foxes feel at home they have installed their own chef to 
prepare halal meals at their World Cup headquarters 140 kilometres from Durban.

Staff at the hotel have reportedly also been taught a smattering of French just 
for good measure with phrases like 'bon appetit'.

Said Elmare Kotze, the hotel's general manager, told South Africa's Sunday 
Times newspaper: "Our main focus is to ensure that the team experience a 'home 
away from home' feeling for the duration of their stay."

England manager Fabio Capello may have slapped a ban on visiting WAGS to avoid 
a repeat of the media circus that accompanied the England team's wives and 
girlfriends in Germany in 2006 - yet one resort is leaving nothing to chance in 
the event that one or two slip through the net.

England are based in Rustenburg, not far from the luxury golf and casino resort 
of Sun City, where Victoria Beckham is, according to local media, tipped to 
stay.

Nicolas Smalberger, chief executive of the five-star Palace of the Lost City 
hotel, assured any WAGS they wouldn't go hungry.

"We bought six extra tubs of caviar, at 8,000 rand (856 euros) a tub. We'll 
probably order some more soon," he told the Times.

"Also we've imported exotic mushrooms and had requests for smoked eel from the 
East."

Sun City's events manager Gert Venter told the same paper: "It's hard to be 
sure about these people's moves, but for instance the Palace would be the 
obvious place for Victoria to stay."

Switzerland were in danger of going into battle on empty stomachs after their 
head cook suffered a broken hand in training in the kitchen.

Thankfully for Ottmar Hitzfeld's squad, Emil Bolli, whose cuisine adds a 
Mediterranean touch to hearty traditional Swiss fare, was given the all clear.

"Only heavy pans give me some trouble, but I can still give orders," he said 
last month.

Supporters at the 2010 World Cup meanwhile can look forward to tucking in to an 
array of indigenous cuisine such as biltong (spicy dried strips of beef or 
antelope), pap (mashed maize), bunny chow (curry) or (not for the 
faint-hearted) sheep head.

This last-named speciality is first boiled then roasted in a culinary procedure 
that exposes the sheep's teeth which lends this local delicacy its name - 
smilies.


Antara, AFP


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