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Food

Fine dining at Israeli hotels offer guilty pleasures

Chefs at Israel's five star hotels are turning to comfort foods for inspiration

December 1, 2016 13:08
Chicken shwarma tops the bill at the American Colony in the East Jerusalem Hotel

By

Anthea Gerrie,

Anthea Gerrie

3 min read

French toast, fish fingers and the kind of shwarma you might pick up as a late night takeaway hardly sound the staple fare of five star hotels. Yet these are the very dishes Israel's smartest hostelries are currently dishing up. Fully-booked dining areas suggest guests are loving what used to be considered guilty pleasures.   

Call it a move to comfort food, or perhaps a backlash against the exciting but pretty out-there food being served by celebrity chefs in the headline-grabbing restaurants of Jerusalem and Tel Aviv.

Jerusalem is a particular case in point. The success of offal- and truffle-filled Machneyuda has not only made the city a dining destination but propagated innovative Israeli food around the world. Yet the city's King David Hotel continues to serve the traditional chopped liver and chicken soup for Friday night dinner. On top of that, the chef's idea of the perfect complement to an Israeli sauvignon blanc in the hotel's new wine bar is - fish fingers.

Admittedly these are not any old crumbed or battered goujon, but instead the most fabulous fish fingers you've ever tasted. Super-fresh cod in a tempura batter, they are inspired by chef David "Dudu" Bitton's love of Japanese cuisine. "I felt they were a must to accompany our selection of Mediterranean white wines," says Bitton, who was running a fine dining restaurant at the age of 21 but feels that after three years at the King David Hotel, he has come to understand the different tastes of hotel diners.