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Eggplant and Yogurt Spread with Saffron

When Anissa Helou told me she was writing a book on the foods of theย Islamic world, I was surprised, and a little curious. I didnโ€™t know much about the food, but I am always drawn to the flavors, and ingredients used: Lots of vegetables, olive oil, pulses, grains, olives, spices, handmade cheeses and flatbreads, fresh fish, and grilled meats. In short, the kind of foodโ€ฆ

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Pantelleria

Well, what can I say? After everyone telling me so much about Pantelleria. I didnโ€™t quite get it when I arrived. But when it was time to leave, it was hard to go. On the day after I landed, by the time afternoon rolled around, I had curled myself up on a cushioned chair with a book Iโ€™d been looking forward to delving into. Thenโ€ฆ

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Eating Around London

I never really โ€œgotโ€ London. It was always this hulking city that I struggled to navigate, overwhelmingly large, with a subway system that seemed like a tangle of routes and directions that I just couldnโ€™t unravel. But part of it is my fault as I never really spent a lot of time trying to figure it out. I just accepted defeat early on. So thisโ€ฆ

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Stockholm

I had no idea what to expect when I planned a trip to Sweden. I think it was a friendly discussion between friends when we decided it would be interesting to go to Fรคviken, the famed restaurant northward of Stockholm. (Iโ€™ll do a separate post on that since it was such a unique experience.) So we made a reservation, then decided to spend a fewโ€ฆ

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Rosendals Tradgard Bageri

I think Iโ€™ve been speaking in too many superlatives lately. Itโ€™s just Iโ€™ve been fortunate to be traveling and finding so many great places. Either that, or itโ€™s just my American side coming out, the one that tends to speak in superlatives. Still (or โ€œOh my God!โ€, as we say), whenever I find something amazing, I canโ€™t help but going a little loopy over itโ€ฆ.

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Tabbouleh

Much of what gets called Tabbouleh bears little resemblance to what Lebanese Tabbouleh is. When I moved to France and began eating in traditional Lebanese restaurants, I was served bowls heaped with fresh herbs, a few tomato chunks, and very, very few bits of bulgur (cracked wheat.) Unlike what is served as Tabbouleh in many places โ€“ which is often a bowl heaped with bulgurโ€ฆ

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Sharjah Market

I have a really dumb habit of always wearing flip-flops, or similar sandal-style shoes, then discovering that I have to do something really precarious a little while later. I remember scaling down rocky cliffs at beaches and almost killing myself, as well as assorted other idiocies attempted with rubber-clad feet. Really, itโ€™s amazing Iโ€™m still alive. Like the flowing robes, sandals are part of theโ€ฆ

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