Become a Member
Opinion

Our heimishe fare is shamed by the cool New York food scene

Ashkenazi food needn’t be the bland poor relation of Sephardi vibrancy. Instead of the pallid stodge we are used to, the same foods and dishes in America are vibrant and exciting

September 17, 2021 14:12
katz PYN6FX
PYN6FX New York, USA - May 29, 2018: People walking on East Houston Street past Katz's Deli in New York, iconic kosher-style delicatessen that has been open
3 min read

Growing up in north London, my best friend from childhood was of Iraqi origin. We’d banter at times, as boys do. I’d mock his Sephardic predilection for ululating and putting protective covers over his sofas. He’d express faux distress at my Ashkenazi paleness and starchy English traditions. But nowhere was this ancestral gulf more apparent than on the subject of food.

While I adored the steaming piles of rice, cooked pumpkin, spicy chicken and lamb to be found at his home, he found the concept of eating gefilte fish or chopped herring profoundly disturbing.

And, in fairness, he often had a point. Sephardic food, whether the Baghdadi dishes I described, or Tunisian shakshuka, Lebanese hummus, Egyptian falafel: all shared a delicious exoticism that made the idea of eating sloppy grey unidentifiable poisson frankly quite embarrassing.

That Sephardic gastro-preeminence continues to this day. Many of London’s best restaurants — Palomar, Honey and Co, Barbary, Coal Office, Ottolenghi and, most recently, Oren, a delicious new Dalston offering — are all heavily influenced by Israeli cooking, which is itself a mezze of different Middle Eastern influences.