In Israel, Arab chefs carve out a distinct cuisine

Four days of celebrating Arab cooking have offered a rare bright spot amid a gloomy period in the region.

Updated - November 16, 2021 06:16 pm IST

Published - December 11, 2015 03:03 pm IST - Israel, Palestine cuisine, Arab cooking

In the past two decades, the Israeli cuisine has flourished on the international scene. Last year the gourmet food and wine publication, Saveur Magazine, named Tel Aviv an “outstanding” food destination. The local edition of Masterchef is popular among Israelis and a home-grown cooking show, Game of Chefs, was recently remade for German television.

Although it relies on the same local ingredients, Palestinian cooking has received much less international attention until now.

Celebrating Arab cuisine

This week, two dozen Arab chefs and a handful of Jewish ones descended on the northern port city of Haifa for four days of celebrating Arab cuisine. The festival was founded by the Arab Israeli chef, Nof Atamna-Ismaeel, who shot to national acclaim when she won ‘Israeli Masterchef’ in 2014 and regularly appears on food programmes in the country.

At the Haifa festival, curious crowds milled around a restaurant kitchen while Jewish Israeli celebrity chef Meir Adoni prepared hummus dishes alongside the Arab Israeli restaurateur, Hussam Abbas.

Lot to learn from each other

“Jews and Arabs can learn about each other’s cooking traditions,” said Ms. Atamna-Ismaeel, who wants to use the festival as a pilot for a culinary school she plans to open in her hometown of Baqa al-Gharbiya in northern Israel.

Around a fifth of Israel’s population is Arab. Arab citizens of Israel have equal legal rights but face discrimination in government budgets, employment and housing. Poverty rates are higher among Arabs than among the country’s Jewish population.

Winds of change for Arab Israelis

For years, the income gap stifled a gourmet scene. In recent years, Arab citizens have reached new heights in areas like music, acting, sports, journalism and culinary arts.

A major challenge to Arab chefs has been breaking out of narrow expectations of Israeli customers, said Mr. Abbas, owner of El Babur, a chain of three restaurants in northern Israel. He said when he opened his first restaurant in 1979, Israeli customers just “wanted hummus, French fries and salad.” Now they are embracing his use of local ingredients such as arugula, wild spinach, asparagus and chicory.

Revisiting ancient Syrian recipes

Younger Arab chefs are pushing the bar, opening a tapas restaurant in the northern city of Acre and revisiting ancient Syrian recipes in Haifa.

Yet the political environment remains a challenge for this new generation of chefs. The festival took place amid a three-month outbreak of violence. Since mid-September, Palestinians have killed 19 Israelis in shootings, stabbings and attacks using cars. At least 109 Palestinians have died by Israeli fire in the same period; 73 of them are said by Israel to be attackers.

Jews’ reluctance

Mr. Abbas said his restaurants have suffered heavy losses as Jewish Israeli clients hesitate to enter Arab towns for dinner.

At the same time, the doors that are opening to Arab Israelis remain mostly closed to Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, largely cut off from Israeli customers and publishers, and limited by Israeli restrictions on travel.

No Palestinian TV food network

There is no Palestinian TV food network. A magazine devoted to Palestinian cuisine began in Ramallah in 2012 but ceased publication within months, and Palestinian Masterchef folded after one season for lack of budget. A rare exception to the anonymity of Palestinian food was The Gaza Kitchen , a cookbook published in 2013 via crowd-funding to celebrate the food of the coastal enclave.

Peter Nasir, a restaurant owner in the West Bank city of Ramallah, said his Palestinian clients were reluctant to “gamble” their limited incomes on new dishes and often ask for old-fashioned classics such as chicken cordon bleu.

Israelis love culinary novelties

“Israelis are more willing to try something new. Here you put some pomegranates in a salad and people start flipping out,” Mr. Nasir said. He said he would not rush to collaborate with Israeli chefs “who at some point will put on a uniform and point a gun at you.”

At the Haifa food festival, the warm relations between Arab and Jewish chefs offered a rare bright spot amid a gloomy period in the region.

Israeli chef Mr. Adoni, who traces his roots to Morocco, spooned a rich stew of lamb, chicken and Jerusalem artichoke over creamy hummus.

Jewish-Arab mixture

“The signature you can get in my plates is the mix between these two influences -- one is the Jewish grandmother’s dishes and the second is the Arabs’ influence,” Mr. Adoni said. He added that while young Arab chefs were now pursuing molecular cooking, Jewish chefs were delving into the roots of Palestinian cuisine.

In September, the Palestinian chef Goric opened a cooking school in Ramallah.

“My vision is to lift up the level of hospitality,” he said. “It’s like being in a box. We need to get out of this box and discover culinary arts.”

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