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Food

Tel Aviv’s food museum

Naama Shefi is working to preserve the past and future of our colourful, culinary history

December 9, 2021 13:13
TA food museum-min-min
4 min read

Seventeen years ago, a Friday night dinner for more than 20 in a tiny Israeli apartment was to (indirectly) provide the inspiration for the opening of new food museum, Asif. Not that Naama Shefi — the museum’s founder — envisaged it at the time.


“I met my husband in 2004 and he invited me to have a Shabbat dinner with his grandmother in her tiny little one bedroom apartment outside Tel Aviv. It was an experience that made an impression on me not only because the food was delicious … but because each of the dishes represented her immigration story. From Izmir in Turkey to the islands of Rhodes to Rhodesia and finally, to Israel.”


Shefi recalls a table laden with food, including eight different egg plant salads; stuffed tomatoes and onions stuffed with meat and rice; Swiss chard pie and albondigas (Spanish meatballs). What struck her was that the dishes represented the old lady’s immigration story from Izmir to Rhodes to Rhodesia and then Israel, and was also evidence that she had lived in an age of austerity. “She used all the parts of every vegetable — so she had a salad from the skins of the zucchini dressed with lemon and garlic. Every dish revealed parts of her history.”


She believes that planted the seed in her head for Jewish Food Society — which she was to found in 2017 — as she realised how important it was to protect this heritage. “She was old at the time and I was determined to protect her legacy — her culinary heritage.”