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Food

Eating up Tel Aviv: an insider’s guide

Tel Aviv's food scene is best sampled with a local and even better if he's one of the best chefs in town

July 19, 2018 08:52
credit david loftis
3 min read

As a tourist, you need a local to point you to to any city’s hidden gems. So when Barak Aharoni, executive chef of the Alena restaurant in boutique hotel, The Norman, invited me to his city for a foodie tour, my Wizz Air flight was booked before you could say falafel.

Aharoni’s Alena is in Israel’s top 20 restaurants, and such is his foodie following, he was invited, last month, to cook at Marylebone eaterie, Carousel for a week. This man knows his food.

Tall, dark and with a gentle air reminiscent of our favourite poster boy of Israeli food, Yotam Ottolenghi, Aharoni’s becoming a bit of a (culinary) rock star.

At 8am, Tel Aviv buzzed with activity as we hop into a taxi to Habshash, Aharoni’s spice supplier. This father and son business is tucked away in a unit in South Tel Aviv’s Levinsky Market. Founded in 1935 by Arie Habshash’s father, Arie now runs the shop with his sons supplying members of the public, restaurants and businesses.