Wednesday, June 16, 2010

Lebanese Restaurant in Ein Kerem

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When I do paid work in archaeology my fellow laborers speak Arabic all day.
So I learned that foochara is what we say when nice potsherds are uncovered and have to be collected.
But when the restaurant chef recommended a meal of meat and vegetables and foochara, I said "What?!"
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When it came out of the oven and onto the table, I finally understood that foochara can also mean an unbroken clay pot.
Aha!

The waiter's T-shirt says (in Hebrew) "Abu Shukri's Lebanese Restaurant."
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Ein Kerem has plenty of fancy restaurants but this rustic one has the best food, and that is where I took my two visiting American friends.

This was my first time to have masachan, another great Lebanese dish made in the oven.
Two chicken legs and vegetables on a special brown pita and spiced, I think, with sumac.
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Note the special issue Coke cans for the World Cup.
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18 comments:

  1. «Louis» once ate in a Lebanese restaurant in Paris. The food was very good just as you found there. Interesting anecdote about the clay pot.
    ;-D

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  2. Oh non, pas le football !!!
    This all looks so yummy, I love Lebanese restaurants!

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  3. It's about dinner time here now, the perfect moment for this delicious post!

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  4. That looks so yummy! I eat Lebanese food at my good friends's restaurant in Montpellier (le Sham).

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  5. Mmmmm... this looks wonderful, Dina! Did it taste as good as it looks?

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  6. Shalom to all the commenting friends here. Wish we could all share a table at Abu Shukri's.

    Kay, did I forget to write that?? Yes, it was all delicious!

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  7. What a scrumptious set of dinner photos, Dina!

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  8. Oh, this is funny! Maybe these dishes are more common in the south . . . I'm not familiar with them, but then I'm no connoisseur.

    I love, love, love Lebanese food, all Mediterranean food, pretty much.

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  9. Someone from Lebanon made the most delicious falafel for me once...in San Diego...long ago. Your post here suddenly reminded me of that.

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  10. Have never tried lebanese food, but I'm sure I would love it.

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  11. Oh gosh, I love lebanese food! This looks fantastic!

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  12. Dina, I only have traditional food everywhere I go! :-)) Is Lebanese food very different from Turkish or Egyptian cuisine? These are the closest countries I've been to.

    Thank you for mentioning Saramago, his death is a great loss for the portuguese literature.

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  13. Shalom friends. I wish we could all sit at a big round table and enjoy this good food together.

    Mary Ann, come on "down south" to sample it. LOL

    JM, sorry, I don't know if Turkish and Egyptian food is different from Lebanese. I've never been to any of these countries myself, and the way things are going, looks like I will not be welcome there. :(

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  14. I have no idea how it taste, we need a big round table and try it out, lol.

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  15. I will have to look up in my notes what Lebanese Rest. we ate at- I was getting sick that night so was quite up to par but so enjoyed all of Israel! I have a bumper sticker on my car- well 2 actually. One says I Break For Tea and the other says Whereever I stand - I stand with Israel!

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