Feast: Food of the Islamic World by Anissa Helou

    • Categories: Bread & rolls, savory; Lebanese; Palestinian; Syrian; Jordanian; Vegan
    • Ingredients: instant yeast; unbleached all-purpose flour; fine sea salt
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Notes about this book

  • Jenny on March 27, 2019

    Anissa Helou, the award-winning chef and authority on the cooking of North Africa, the Mediterranean, and the Middle East, shares her extraordinary range of beloved, time-tested recipes and stories from cuisines throughout the Muslim world. I cannot say enough about how incredible this book is - encyclopedic while beautiful, stunning photographs and the cuisine of the Islamic world brought to our fingertips. Another best book of 2018, if not the best.

Notes about Recipes in this book

  • Uzbek flatbread (Non 1)

    • rchewing on December 19, 2023

      Goes well with feta cucumber salad and curry. Used ghee to glaze and nigella seeds.

  • Poussin tagine with olives and preserved lemons (D’jaj bkhizü)

    • Stephenn31 on October 22, 2023

      Delicious sauce, though the chicken was a bit overcooked. I served with couscous instead of bread.

  • Lamb stewed with cumin (Tangia)

    • Ishie1013 on January 11, 2023

      I cooked this to the letter after success with a different recipe in this book, and it is absolutely awful. There's nothing to sauce out or stew the lamb other than it's own juices, and it does not produce enough for this to be anything but an overcooked tough burned mess. I had the burner on low, and 40 minutes short of the 1:15 cooktime, the smell became too much to ignore. While not totally burned, this was never going to return to tender or well cooked and it was a huge waste of a lamb leg. I cook well; I should have known not to follow this recipe.

  • Slow-cooked biryani (Dumpukht biryani)

    • mlondoner100 on May 21, 2021

      This recipe didn't 100% work for me. I think the recipe calls for a lot of liquid, and in the end the biryani was far too wet. The end product tasted great in terms of flavour, but it was very sloppy and in a bid to reduce the water, the rice overcooked and became mushy.

  • Bengali vegetable "risotto" (Bengali khichdi)

    • Nichill on February 15, 2021

      I've not cooked anything like this before, but found the recipe less than fully helpful. I think she's missed 500ml of water somewhere. I may have added an extra litre by the end. The sauteeing the spices at the beginning resulted in everything becoming fused to the bottom of the pan, so we had to add liquid to deglaze with the tomatoes. As always, the potatoes took longer to cook (we used large dice) than the allotted time, though if we'd started with more water that might have helped. However, it was delicious and interesting. We might easily try it again, or look for a different rice & lentil dish to try.

  • Lebanese/Syrian vermicelli rice (Rezz bil-sh’ayriyeh)

    • eclairea on December 30, 2025

      Nice and simple side!

  • Egyptian-style ful medammes (Ful medammes 1)

    • Hansyhobs on May 21, 2022

      Really nice, I also added a soft boiled egg as a topping. Don't let the peas dry out too much before mashing

  • Mario Haddad's fattoush

    • Stephenn31 on July 15, 2024

      A nice balanced dressing on this fattoush. Interesting technique to soak the sumac in warm water first.

  • Stuffed cabbage leaves (Mehshi malfuf)

    • Ishie1013 on January 10, 2023

      Excellent take on cabbage rolls. I've never made them before, so I watched a youtube video for the technique, though the book does go into detail, but these came out great! I did incorporate 7 spice I brought back from Jordan into the stuffing and used arborio rice, which is a good stand in for Egyptian rice as mods. I recruited family to help cutting and rolling, which made the process go quickly.

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  • ISBN 10 1526602865
  • ISBN 13 9781526602862
  • Published Oct 04 2018
  • Format Hardcover
  • Page Count 544
  • Language English
  • Countries United Kingdom
  • Publisher Bloomsbury

Publishers Text

A sweeping culinary journey across the Islamic world, and a celebration of its most iconic recipes.A diverse and rich culinary tradition has evolved in every place touched by Islam, always characterised by deliciousness and fragrance, a love of herbs and the deft use of spices. Anissa Helou's Feast represents an extraordinary journey through place and time, travelling from Senegal to Indonesia via the Arab, Persian, Mughal or North African heritage of so many dishes. This exploration of the foods of Islam begins with bread, and its myriad variations, from pita and chapatti to Turkish boreks and Lebanese fatayer. From humble grains and pulses come slow-cooked biryanis, Saudi Arabia's national dish of Lamb kabsa and magnificent jewelled rice dishes from Iran and Pakistan. Instructions for preparing a whole lamb or camel hump sit alongside recipes for traditional dips, fresh salads and sharp pickles. And numerous sugary sweet treats suitable for births, weddings, morning coffee and after dinner glint irresistibly from the pages.With more than 300 recipes, spectacular food photography and interspersed with enchanting anecdotes, Feast is a comprehensive and dazzling mosaic of Islamic food culture across the globe.

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