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Tawlet Souk el Tayeb, Lebanese food in Paris

One of the great regrets I had in life was when I went to Beirut and didnโ€™t go to the Tawlet Souk el Tayeb, a culinary project supportingย local farmers, cooks, and producers. Thereโ€™s also a weekly farmersโ€™ market, classes and meals. Because my schedule was so packed on my trip, as much as I tried, I didnโ€™t make it. A few years later โ€“ asโ€ฆ

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Lebanese Meze

The Lebanese are real โ€œsnackersโ€, a point brought home by Mazen Hajjar, the owner of 961, Lebanonโ€™s first (and only) craft brewery that told me if I went into someoneโ€™s home in Lebanon and they offered a drink โ€“ but no bowl of nuts or seeds, โ€œYou should goโ€ฆjust get up and leave immediately.โ€ Fortunately I never had to, because true to his word, eachโ€ฆ

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Saj, Flatbreads and Lebanese Pastries

Since a number of people have been asking, whenever I ask the bakers who are making flatbreads in Lebanon, specifically what their formula is for they breads they are rolling out (or tossing), Iโ€™ll get the same, vague response; โ€œFlour and water..oh, and a little olive oil.โ€ And thatโ€™s it, as they continue with their busywork. While I suspect if I pressed them further, theyโ€ฆ

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