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Food

Feeding interfaith relations

Meet the team behind Nottingham community project, SaSh kitchen

July 8, 2021 12:13
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3 min read

There is a strict order to food preparation. You look up a recipe, buy the ingredients and make a dish. But for Tali Scott, the process happens in reverse. The Israeli, who cooks meals for homeless and vulnerable people with SaSh Kitchen, never knows what ingredients will be available before she collects them.
Thankfully, her years of working as a chef mean she can turn whatever is at her disposal into a tasty, colourful and, most importantly, nutritious dish. “Some people cut corners when they are making food for homeless people. I don’t. I really put my heart and soul into it since it might be the only hot meal they are getting that week.”

Courgettes lend themselves well to frittatas, butternut squash become a delicious roast and a whole array of vegetables can be transformed into ratatouille. Scott likes to make green salad, especially during the summer, but if mangoes are in abundance one week, she will adapt the menu to include a fruit salad instead.

The cook, who runs her own falafel business (Falafel Baffle), is careful to not make dishes too spicy. “People who are vulnerable or homeless might not have such healthy digestive systems.” She also includes some non-dairy and non-egg options for people with allergies or intolerances. “Because of who our clients are, we need to think of everything.”