Growing up in Zambia, Mwila Kapungulya could buy biltong at nearly every store, pub and neighborhood food vendor. But the dried-meat snack was much harder to come by when he moved to Minnesota more than 15 years ago.
So he and a few fellow African immigrants eventually made their own and started sharing it, then selling it — then selling out of it.
Zambezi Biltong has quickly become a farmers market favorite, and its founders have big ambitions once more people know what, exactly, biltong is.
Just don't call it jerky.
"It's a pleasant variation from what many have grown up to know as a meat snack," said Kapungulya, Zambezi Biltong chief executive and co-founder. "Once they get a taste of it, it speaks for itself."
Biltong originated in southern Africa and is prepared by curing meat in salt and vinegar and letting it air-dry over several days.
Jerky, meanwhile, is typically marinated, smoked and flavored with sugar. It is dried relatively quickly through low-temperature cooking.
Though extra spices are sometimes added to biltong, "it's more to complement the natural flavors of the meat," Kapungulya said.