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Food

How Yotam Ottolenghi is inspired by Jerusalem’s culinary mish-mash

September 20, 2012 09:50
Photo: Keiko Oikawa

ByVictoria Prever, Victoria Prever

3 min read

Yotam Ottolenghi’s passion for the food of his homeland is no secret. Last year’s award-winning BBC4 documentary, Jerusalem on a Plate, was a very public love letter. Jerusalem’s food is, he says: “The perfect expression of a mish-mash of cultures”. It was this mixture of cuisines, he adds, that “inspired me to cook”.
Now he and fellow chef, Sami Tamimi, one of the co-founders of the Ottolenghi chain of restaurants, have committed their passion to print with the recent publication of new cookbook, Jerusalem. For both cooks, the plundering of their culinary roots has been a bit of a U-turn.

The men, who met while cooking in London, both grew up in Jerusalem but on different sides of the tracks. Ottolenghi is the Jewish son of German and Italian immigrant parents and Tamimi is of Palestinian parentage. Nonetheless, they found many shared food memories.
“Our sensitivities and flavours were very similar,” Ottolenghi says. “The smells of the Judean hills — of za’atar and thyme; the same sized dice of chopped salad, for example; or the food we weren’t allowed to eat on our way home from school. I would arrive home late and covered in all the bits that had fallen out of the pitta.”

When the pair founded their cafe chain, the food they cooked was new and different. “For eight years we never consciously looked back to Jerusalem.” he says. “The whole premise of Ottolenghi was to cook for the here and now without consciously basing our food on any cuisine,” he explains. Although the dishes they created did not look to the food of their home country, they were obviously influenced by the flavours they grew up with, as well as the food they had tasted on their travels in Asia and beyond.

Their colourful recipes combined a whole raft of ingredients new to English cooks, including za’atar, sumac and pomegranate, combined with buckets of fresh herbs. “I have made my name on za’atar,” laughs Ottolenghi.
But then Noam Barr, one their Ottolenghi business partners, suggested they might want to look to their background for inspiration.