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A taste of Arabian delight; William Leece discovers the Bluecoat team getting to grips with Middle Eastern cookery.


Byline: William Leece

B EN HOUGH n. 1. Same as Hock, a joint.
v. t. 1. Same as Hock, to hamstring.
[

imp. & p. p. os> Houghed

r>;

p. pr. & vb. n. os> Houghing.]

n. 1. An adz; a hoe.
v. t. 1. To cut with a hoe.
 is a man on a rapidly rising learning curve. As the acting head chef at the Bluecoat blue·coat  
n.
A person who wears a blue uniform, especially a police officer.



bluecoat
, in Liverpool city centre, he will be part of the team laying on the catering for the Arabic Arts Festival's Arabic Weekender, starting on Friday.

All sorts of Arabic and Middle Eastern delights are promised, from the familiar hoummous and stuffed vine leaves to the intriguing potato harra and chicken tawook.

The trademark of a modern chef is his versatility, but Ben has not been afraid to look for advice from wherever he can get it.

"Fortunately, a friend of mine lives and works in Bahrain, so he's given me as much advice as he possibly can, and many of the recipes are quite generic in style."

And there's even more expertise closer at hand. Liverpool's Arabic population is mainly Yemeni in background, and there are the beginnings of a thriving restaurant community in the city.

Finoon Saleh is typical, born to Yemeni parents, yet as much Liver pudlian as she is Arabic, and co-ordinator of the Arabic Weekend.

"My mum said that when she first came in, you couldn't even get halal ha·lal   Islam
n.
Meat that has been slaughtered in the manner prescribed by the shari'a.

adj.
1. Of or being meat slaughtered in the prescribed way: a halal butcher; a halal label.
 meat. You'd have to travel far to get spices and things, yet now everything's so readily available."

Previous dining events connected with the Arabic Arts Festival An arts festival or art fair is a festival that focuses on the visual arts, but which may also focus on other arts.

Arts festivals in the visual arts are exhibitions.
 have been held at the Palm House, in Sefton Park, but this year the Festival is largely based around the Bluecoat, before a big relaunch as a stand-alone event next year.

Hence the teamwork between Arabic cooks and the Bluecoat's own chefs to keep the food on offer this weekend as authentic as it possibly can be.

"Just on Lodge Lane, in Toxteth, there's about six different Middle Eastern restaurants," explains Finoon. "Now you can get all the spices and all the meat just as if you were in Yemen; you don't miss out on anything."

Arabic and Middle Eastern food is famed for the delicacy of its spices, and should not come as too much of a culture shock to those used to dining out at Greek restaurants in Liverpool.

Greece was part of the Islamic Ottoman Empire until the mid-19th century, which also took in vast tracts of the Arabic world.

The Ottomans left their very distinctive stamp on Greek cooking, and even now some restaurants branded as Greek are actually run by exiles from neighbouring countries like Lebanon, Syria and Turkey.

"I think the way in which it is different from other foods is that it's so many things at once," says Finoon.

"You wouldn't just have one course on its own, you'd have a plate of olives, salad, meat, all served at once.

"That's as opposed to a western meal where, for example, you have a starter on its own, then move on.

"There's a kind of focus to the meat, too, mainly chicken and lamb, and there's quite a lot of sweet and savoury mixes as well, like the baklava sweets with the nuts and the honey."

Finoon confesses she has developed a taste for date toasties for breakfast, the sweetness of the dates contrasting the savoury flavours and textures of the bread. Spices and herbs like coriander coriander (kōr'ēăn`dər), strong-smelling Old World annual herb (Coriandrum sativum) of the family Umbelliferae (parsley family), cultivated for its fruits.  are a little more subtle than those of India to the East - or at least more subtle than those of the average British curry house.

"When I was younger, people at school used to ask me did I eat curry? Not really, it was more tomato-based stews, with quite a lot of cinnamon, garlic and coriander."

The modern Arabic world is huge, covering 22 separate states and spanning Asia and North Africa all the way from Morocco in the west, across to Iraq and the Gulf states in the East.

Cooking styles can vary, but the overall impression is of a style standing partway part·way  
adv. Informal
To a certain degree or distance; in part: partway to town; not even partway reasonable. 
 between that of central Asia and the Mediterranean.

Finoon says: "That's what we have at home, with the olives, the tabouleh, stuffed vine leaves.

"This year at the festival family day, we're hoping to have a lot of small dishes like muttabel, which is the smoked aubergine (jargon) aubergine - A secret term used to refer to computers in the presence of computerphobic third parties.  dip.

"There's hoummous, fattoush salad and some meat dishes like lamb kofta."

Weather permitting, the Bluecoat's weekend barbecue will be turned over to the Middle Eastern dishes, with main courses including the Arabic mixed grill chicken tawook, lamb kofta kebabs, and a relatively rare appearance of beef in a beef tikka tikka
Adjective

Indian cookery (of meat) marinated in spices and then dry-roasted: chicken tikka 
, plus extra dishes on offer in the main interior r estaurant.

* THE Arabic Weekender is in Liverpool at a variety of venues across Liverpool, from Friday, July 17, to Sunday, July 19. Family day is on Saturday, at the Bluecoat, from 12noon-5pm.

williamleece@liverpool.com

CAPTION(S):

On a learning curve ... Bluecoat chef Ben Hough, with Finoon Saleh, from the Arabic Arts Festival
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Publication:Daily Post (Liverpool, England)
Date:Jul 14, 2009
Words:800
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