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Where doesย the time go? When people used to say that, I thought they were being overly dramatic. Or worse, meant that I was getting older at a faster clip than I thought. But what I think it means, for all of us, is that life used to roll along at a more leisurely clip, but nowadays, I wake up and find another year has passed.

Last year, which admittedly, was only a few weeks ago, I had dinner at Liza. A modern space in Paris, a few blocksย from the stoic bourse (the stock exchange, but which also refers to the sack holding the โ€œfamily jewelsโ€ of a bull), Liza is an outpostย of a restaurant in Beirut, a city Iโ€™ve been fortunate enough to eat in, which I did like a velociraptor.

Middle Eastern food is something I can eat morning, noon, and night (and if I ever became one of those people that sleepwalks and eats in their sleep, Iโ€™d be eating Middle Eastern food in the deepest recesses of the evening), and if youโ€™ve had a Middle Eastern breakfast, you know what I mean. Itโ€™s usually a copious spread of just-baked flatbreads, savory spreads, thick, glossy olive oil, cubes of salty cheese, pickled walnuts, olives, eggs, onions, tomatoes, tons of fresh herbs, hot sauce to dab on everything, etc., Iโ€™m going to stop, because Iโ€™ll run out of bandwidth if I continue to list everything thatโ€™s heaped on tables in front of you. And thatโ€™s just for breakfast.

I also like the style of eating, which is often called โ€œgrazing,โ€ which sounds like a bunch of four-legged animals wandering through a field, taking bites of flowers between the weeds and grass. The way I do it makes you understand why raptors went extinct: Iโ€™m dangerous to be around, and if something gets between me and the food, beware of the consequences.

Paris has a number of Middle Eastern restaurants, as well as North African ones, but most couldnโ€™t be described as โ€œupscale.โ€ Like โ€œgrazing,โ€ Iโ€™m not in love with that word either, but Iโ€™d rather be reaching for fattoush (above) or fafalel (below), rather than searching for words.

We were invited to dinner, a Lebanese restaurant recommended to me by a number of readers. Sure, there are plenty of sandwich stands and โ€œsnack-styleโ€ joints in Paris, but nothing* like Ottolenghi or Honey & Co. in London,ย Glasserieย and Tanoreen in Brooklyn, or La Sheesh in Detroit, which apparently has been reopened by new owners, and was particularly memorable for me because when Alice Medrich found out I was going to Detroit when the original one was open, she insisted that I stop there. Trusting her implicitly, I did so in my rental car, on the way from the airport to a class I was teaching. The smell from the brown paper bag was so excruciating that after a few minutes,ย I had to pull over to the side of the road and rip into the sack, digging into the food with the small rounds of warm flatbreads theyโ€™d given me.

I had some lovely nibbles at the bar of Liza while I waited for Romain, chatting with one of the owners, and sipping a glass of Syrianย wine, which we enjoyed with the rest of our meal after being led to our table. Iโ€™m happy to just order a whole mess of stuff and grazeโ€ฆum, I mean, tasteโ€ฆa number of different things. We decided on the Menu Dรฉgustation, which came with or without grilled meats. We went with the meats.

Griddled halloumi cheese came with a sticky dab of tomato jam, which got the meal off to a great start.

Hummusย came piped and swirled in a bowlโ€ฆ

And we stuck forks into Tabbouleh and Baba Ganoush, and wrapped extra-crisp falafels in flatbreads, surrounded by groups of people from local offices, having a good time, enjoying an after-work dinner together. One of the things thatโ€™s often missing in restaurants, Middle Eastern and otherwise, is really goodย olive oil. You really need to use good olive oil to make food taste good. There is a world of difference and traveling in the Middle East, where itโ€™s plentiful, itโ€™s easy to understand (and taste) how important it is. Yet in other parts of the world, itโ€™s less-available and expensive. I never sure how to get around this, but I think like French bread expert Steven Kaplan brings his own baguettes to restaurants in Paris, I may start bringing my own flask of olive oil.

The mezzes (first courses) well all good, and I would make a meal of just those, but we didnโ€™t love the grillades as much as expected. The skewers of ground lamb and chicken had a bit of an aromaย from the gas flame, which likely has to do with extreme restrictions the close-quartered city of Paris may haveย on wood-fired ovens. Maybe it was that evening and someone had the flame on too high?

Desserts were really great. Normally you need to be a lover of sweets to enjoy the syrupy treatsย from that part of the world, but even I have my limits; I once saw a woman at a confectionary shop scraping a big, jellied wad of what looked like thickened glucose into a container, for a customerย to take home. I didnโ€™t ask what it was, but the clerk gave them a few spoons to use, along with a bag. So I presumed it was some sort of dessert that I wasnโ€™t familiar with.

The desserts at Liza were refined and had just the right balance of sweetness. The assortment of fiveย baklawasย included Haytaliรฉ, a milky custard with orange flower water and a puddle of orange coulis floating on top, Sfouf, a saffron cake with pumpkin and pistachios, and Kanafeh, threads of dough baked with sweet cheese. It was great to be able to have a little taste of several, which all went well with steaming glasses of mint tea.

When nature called, I took a walk around the restaurant and saw these great movie posters that my Lebanese friend Anissa said were Egyptian, when I sent her a query about them. Some were for films, and the others are for tourism.ย I donโ€™t speak the same language of these posters, but the food? I definitely get.

Liza Restaurant
14, rue de la Banque (2nd)
Tรฉl: 01 55 35 00 66
Mรฉtro: Bourse

[Liza Paris also has a Lebanese Bakery and Sandwich shop at the same address, which is open for lunch Monday through Friday, noon to 3:30pm.]

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How to Eat a Falafel in Lebanon

Saj, Flatbreads and Lebanese Pastries

Hummus with Spiced Lamb

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*A recent addition to the Paris restaurant scene is Tavline, whose chefs come from Israel, and Iโ€™m looking forward to trying.

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29 comments

    • Nadia Graves

    Wow! I now want to move to Paris immediately.

    • Camellia

    Is that bowl of green herbs โ€œcharmoulahโ€? Iโ€™m just learning about it recently, looking for recipes. Thanks!

      • David
      David Lebovitz

      I think youโ€™re referring to the tabbouleh, which unlike versions made elsewhere, the Lebanese tabbouleh (which is my favorite) is an abundance of herbs with just a little bit of bulghur. Chermoula is a sauce. (And a very delicious one at that!)

        • johanna

        referring to the amazing first photo of tabbouleh-which greens are used? it looks more than parsleyโ€ฆ.

          • Hala

          Mainly parsley (big bunch), a bit of chopped mint, tomato, a bunch of burgul, oil, lemon, salt.

          This is the main tabbouleh, however you can add cucumber (in Beirut they donโ€™t use cucumber but for the North, Tripoli we do). You can chop also raddish, lettuce.. all in small pieces. Sahten :)

            • johanna

            thank you Hala!
            could the long strips of green as it appears in the photo be basil?

          • Hala

          Yup I guess they r parsley.. have no idea what kind of parsley they used because they are not supposed to be long strips :). Use parsley and you are fine. Of course nothing is compared to what you cultivate in your own gardenโ€ฆ mmm. I think I will end up having tabbouleh for lunch today.

      • June2

      Iโ€™m gonna copy this tonight with kale, shallots, tomato and hemp seeds in place bulgarโ€ฆthx!

    • Bev

    i too am wondering what is that bowl of green spinach-like vegetables in your first picture. It looks like it has pine nuts in it. Looks delicious!

    • Joe

    Liza is one of my favorite restaurants in Paris! Fantastic food and wonderful service. Thereโ€™s a beautiful wine bar nearby in a gorgeous passageway for a before-dinner drink (or two)โ€“ LeGrand Filles et Fils. Thereโ€™s also a back window view of the inner workings of a bustling eclair factory (beautiful but somehow sad and soulless).

    • TE Williams

    I so enjoy your wonderful email updates and recipes, David. They are my little escape from the sad and dreary political news of this hemisphere.

    The Banana Upside Down Cake was a huge hit with guests a few weekends ago. Please keep inspiring us.Thank you.

    • Joan

    Are you sure it was Syrian wine? Not Lebanese wine (Syrah?) maybe?
    I have heard a lot about Liza, but it seems out of my budget โ€“ maybe Iโ€™ll try the sandwich bar when Iโ€™m in Paris next week (yaaay!) I can translate the film poster titles if you like, hhh!

    • Parisbreakfast

    I too could eat middle eastern food morning, noon and night. Anything lemony rings my bell. Looks yum.
    Thanks for letting us know.

    • italian girl cooks

    It all looks deliciously authentic โ€“ must expand my cooking horizon.

    • Pauline

    I, too, love your culinary travelogue and recipes. Thank you very much David

    • Taste of France

    I have eaten Lebanese food in a number of countries (Kenya, India, Dubai, U.S., though not yet in Lebanon though I would love to see it one day), and it is always divine. Thatโ€™s to say the kind of delicious that makes you close your eyes and thank heaven for being alive.
    You write wonderful restaurant reviews. One of the big papers should hire you.

    • Karen K.

    Iโ€™m from Detroit originally and I always ate at Le Shish every time I went home to visit family. I was shocked when they went out of business but Iโ€™m glad to hear someone is trying to bring back the recipes.

    • Will

    Off-topic but very important information! A โ€˜French-Inspiredโ€™ McDonaldโ€™s has opened here in Manhattan at 28th and 6th! Somebody pinch me!

    • kelleyn rothaermel

    looks wonderful!

    • Rachael

    Next time youโ€™re in L.A., you should check out Marouch!

    • Susan

    David-do you have any idea how to get the pumpkin into a sfouf recipe? I love pumpkin. Thanks

    • Lily

    I just came back today from Beirut and ate yesterday lunch at Tawlet โ€“ it was really a treat.

    There is nothing better than eating Lebanese food in Lebanon!

    Well, next best thing is to eat in Paris when you do not want to fly out. ;-)

    • Patricia

    I love that Lebanese food is available in Paris. As a vegetarian on a budget, being able to get the โ€œsandwichโ€ (falafel rolled up in flatbread with hummus & Lebanese pickles) was a godsend.

    • Oonagh

    David, OT with apologies โ€“ I made your tarte tatin pour la regime from The Sweet Life in paris for dessert last night, delicious, thank you!
    (And the velociraptor link today made me laugh, thanks!)

    • Beeta @ Mon Petit Four

    Iโ€™m Persian so after a month-long vacation in Paris, I was finding myself in desperate need of some Middle Eastern food after all the magret and viennoiserie I was stuffing my face in. I dined at a Lebanese restaurant in Paris called La Table Libanaiseโ€ฆI highly recommend it! Had some of the best baklava Iโ€™ve ever enjoyed there :)

      • David
      David Lebovitz

      Thanks for the recommendation. We tried to go there one night, crossing town, only to find a dreaded โ€œFermeture exceptionelleโ€ (closed for unspecified reason) sign that particular night on the door! : 0

    • ron shapley

    So Daveโ€ฆ you are saying you canโ€™t get โ€œGoodโ€ Olive oil in a restaurant ??

    • ebee

    Why is the olive oil we get in the States so often sub-par? What do you use, recommend-carry?

      • David
      David Lebovitz

      One good brand in the U.S. is California Olive Ranch olive oil, and is easy to obtain. There are other good California olive oils but since I donโ€™t know any particular brands. And there are good olive oils from other places available, including (but not limited to), Greece, France, Italy, Tunisia and other places. Check out my post: 8 Tips on Olive Oil for more advice.

A

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