eG Foodblog: Hassouni (2012) - Beirut and beyond
#121
Posted 06 March 2012 - 08:27 PM
#122
Posted 06 March 2012 - 08:41 PM
#123
Posted 06 March 2012 - 09:46 PM
Thanks for sharing your adventures with us.
#124
Posted 06 March 2012 - 11:19 PM
eG Ethics Signatory
"My doctor told me to stop having intimate dinners for four.
Unless there are three other people." Orson Welles
My eG Foodblog
#125
Posted 06 March 2012 - 11:22 PM
Thanks for a wonderful tour, with evocative writing and tantalizing photos...and thanks for answering our questions and comments.
In these days of reading about the Arab Spring (in whichever country) your foodblog is especially encouraging. This has been a great pleasure, and has given me fresh inspiration to break out my Lebanese and Egyptian cookbooks.
Safe travels, and thanks for sharing with us
"Every day should be filled with something delicious, because life is too short not to spoil yourself. " --Ling (with permission)
"There comes a time in every project when you have to shoot the engineer and start production."
--author unknown
#126
Posted 07 March 2012 - 12:30 AM
Thanks for sharing your week with us. Maybe we can work it out so a bunch of us can be there at once some day:)
I'm in!
#127
Posted 07 March 2012 - 08:30 AM
Safe travels, Hassouni! What a glorious ride you've taken us on! This is a blog I'll return to again and again.
My thoughts exactly. And now I have a better road map for attempting an authentic Lebanese feast now that I see how it's done on and around the streets of lovely Beirut, better than any cook book.
foodblogs: Dining Downeast I - Dining Downeast II
Portland Food Map.com
#128
Posted 08 March 2012 - 08:25 AM
Al-Rifai: An internationally famous Lebanese roaster chain, specializing in nuts, coffee, and other treats:
Individually wrapped chocolates
Nuts of all types:
non-chocolate sweets:
Raw nuts, etc:
Overview of the shop:
Next - Goodies, which is a well known upmarket supermarket on Verdun Street (near our flat) specializing mostly in non-Lebanese things, as well as really good Lebanese food:
cheeses - kashkawan, halloum, and many other kinds
next to it is 'Abd al-Rahman Hallab, the outpost of Lebanon's most famous sweets shop, founded in Tripoli in 1881, and imitated across the country with numerous other Abdul-So-and-So Hallabs. This one is the best. The last time I went was last May, and God, they have everything - baqlawa, knafeh, stretchy Arabic ice cream, 'osmaliyye, you name it - and they execute it perfectly.
Next up, Douaihy, another well known sweet shop:
Bye bye Beirut:
(that's the whole city sticking out into the sea)
My friend whose birthday we celebrated the other night gave me a wrapped package from Boshali, yet another sweet shop, this time based in Beirut. Got home to open up my luggage, unwrapped it, and found:
Sweet!
So that's it for new content. Thanks so much for all your interests and comments - I have to say, I should have done this last year, when I had more friends in town and was going out a lot more often - you would have seen even more Lebanese delights, but oh well! Please feel free to ask more questions.
Edited by Hassouni, 08 March 2012 - 08:49 AM.
#129
Posted 08 March 2012 - 08:55 AM
Thank you for your wonderful blog this week and I'm glad you made it home safely.
#130
Posted 08 March 2012 - 09:06 AM
#131
Posted 08 March 2012 - 09:09 AM
Edit: once the thread is closed, please feel free to ask me whatever you want in the Middle East Cooking thread, the Lebanon dining thread, or by PM!
Edited by Hassouni, 08 March 2012 - 09:52 AM.
#132
Posted 08 March 2012 - 12:20 PM
Er, getting stoned? (Sorry, couldn't resist!) Thanks for a great blog; now I'm hungry!And olives just sitting on a stone fence. No idea what they were doing there!
#133
Posted 08 March 2012 - 12:30 PM
#134
Posted 08 March 2012 - 01:43 PM




This topic is locked






