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Starring role for Israeli food

Assaf Granit and team have been recognised by Michelin for their Paris restaurant, Shabour

September 2, 2021 10:21
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4 min read

He’s no Olympian, but for ten days, earlier this year Assaf Granit felt as though he had won gold for his country. The celebrity chef had not excelled on the gymnastics mat or running track — his winning ways were in the kitchen. He had achieved a foodie first for Israeli cuisine — a Michelin star for Parisian restaurant, Shabour.

Granit says he and the restaurant’s co-founders Uri Navon, Dan Yosha and Tomer Lanzmann felt like heroes in the aftermath of the official announcement ceremony — broadcast via Zoom from the Eiffel Tower, which he attended from Tel Aviv with his eight-year-old son. “In Israel it was like we’d won an Olympic medal or an Oscar. People went crazy — we couldn’t believe the reaction. We got calls from politicians and the amount of love, support and respect was mind blowing!”

Shabour, which translates literally as ‘broken’ is also slang for having a hangover — which may seem an odd choice of restaurant name. Speaking to me from Israel, where he is currently filming a new television series, Israel’s Next Restaurant, Granit explains the name was inspired by the building within which it sits.

“We visited six sites and this was the first — an old jazz club with the walls covered with thin wood panels painted black and white. I moved them to see the wall behind and the stone was beautiful — like Jerusalem stone — big ancient blocks. Immediately I said to Tomer ‘this is the place we have to take it’. We said we would break down the walls to see the stones behind — we’d live with them broken — shabour. Dan said that was a great name for the restaurant.”