| Chefs explore ingredients of Eastern Mediterranean Lebanese, Turkish and Israeli influences spread over U.S. menus
By BRET
THORN
(Nov.
30,
2009)
When Americans think of Mediterranean cuisine, what most often comes to mind is not-so-authentic Italian food, maybe with a bit of influence from Spain, Southern France or Greece. But more and more these days restaurateurs are looking a bit farther east for inspiration. “The Eastern Mediterranean I think holds such a new experience for so many diners,” says Dallas chef-restaurateur Stephan Pyles, whose newest restaurant, Samar, devotes a whole section of its menu to the region. Samar, like many new restaurants, focuses on small plates. Pyles originally planned on making it a Spanish tapas place, but decided that had been done. So Spanish food ended up being only one section of the menu. The other two are Indian and Eastern Mediterranean. Pyles says the Eastern Mediterranean made for a good bridge between Spain and India. More importantly, he says, “It’s food I love, and food we’ve always considered very healthy.” Hummus was probably the breakthrough menu item that brought Eastern Mediterranean food to the mainstream American consciousness. From there, labneh, a soft cheese, started to take hold. Now restaurateurs report success with skewered kebabs, and kibbeh, a sort of dumpling made by combining ground meat and bulgur to make a crust and stuffing it with spiced meat. In Washington, D.C., Zaytinya launched a special menu featuring the cuisine of Lebanon. The restaurant is run by chef-restaurateur José Andrés and represents the cuisines of Greece, Lebanon and Turkey. “In the past we’ve done a lot of stuff around Greece,” says head chef Mike Isabella. “So this time we wanted to highlight Lebanon. It has great food and is tremendously influential in the region, he says. Lebanon has long been influential in the Eastern Mediterranean. It was the center of the ancient Phoenician civilization, and many modern Lebanese take particular pride both in that heritage and in their cuisine. At Zaytinya, Isabella is offering items such as butternut squash kadaif, or squash with pistachio, shredded phyllo known as kadaif, and “burnt honey,” which is made by heating honey in a skillet until it browns and cooks down a little, giving it a toasted flavor. Another favorite of Isabella’s is mohammara, or slow-cooked chicken thigh with red bell pepper, pomegranate and walnuts. Zaytinya’s customers are especially responsive to the various kibbehs he offers during his Flavors of Lebanon promotion, including chicken, potato, turkey and cuttlefish. He also makes his own version of kibbeh nayeh. Normally made with raw lamb or beef, Isabella makes his with raw fluke that he mixes with bulgur, mint, radish and smoked trout roe. Traditional kibbeh nayeh is popular at Steve’s Backroom, a restaurant in Saint Clair Shores, Mich. There chef Charles Raffoul uses a combination of 20 percent lamb and 80 percent beef that he mixes with a spice mixture including cinnamon and allspice. “The Muslims add cumin, but we don’t,” says Raffoul, who is a Lebanese Christian. He also adds salt, pepper, onions and bulgur. Todd English, who has built his culinary reputation on Mediterranean food, is focusing especially on the Eastern Mediterranean for his latest project, Juliet Supperclub in New York, where he is consulting chef. Although lamb chops are on the menu, much of the food is mezze—small items. “I’m kind of calling it nomadic tribe cuisine,” English says. “The food of the people who brought olives and olive oil through Europe. Juliet is a lounge, and it’s about sharing, and mezze is food that you share.” Some of the items are traditional such as manti, tiny lamb dumplings in yogurt sauce. Others are what English calls “interpretive Mediterranean,” such as tuna tartare flavored with tabouleh, a salad made of parsley, bulgur, lemon and tomato. |