Palestinian chef Fadi Kattan offers a tour of Bethlehem in his new cookbookNPR
Chef Fadi Kattan is well aware that it might not be the right time to release a cookbook about Palestinian food – not when people in Gaza are starving.
“But you know my publisher is of Jewish faith,” he told Morning Edition host Leila Fadel. “She said, now the book even has more significance.”
That’s because his book – Bethlehem: A Celebration of Palestinian Food – is dedicated to preserving part of a culture that’s been torn apart by decades of displacement and war. It’s a love letter through food to his childhood home in the West Bank.
“I started food tours in Bethlehem, and I would take people along with me to the markets,” he said. “In the book, I wanted to be able to transmit this to people and say, look, you’re actually coming on a visit of Bethlehem with me through the recipes.”
The dishes reflect Palestinians’ diversity in Bethlehem and beyond, from a simple fig salad with olive oil and sumac – to the spiced rice and fish favorite sayadieh samak – to a Christmas fruitcake. With the crisis in Gaza, Kattan implores, “Time is running out. We need to preserve those recipes. We need to share them with people.”
To listen to the broadcast version of this story, use the audio player at the top of the page. Below is a recipe from Bethlehem: A Celebration of Palestinian Food.
LENTIL SOUP
“My mother cooks shorbat adas, a lentil soup, for us as soon as the wind gets chilly in Bethlehem, and often in the days of Lent. Widely regarded as the healthy option to many a fast and as a food of the less fortunate, shorbat adas is in reality the noblest of soups, with its rituals of fresh accompaniments: Palestinian finely chopped salad, radishes, spring onions, and fried bread.”
380 g / 13 ounces red lentils
4 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
2 onions, finely chopped
3 garlic cloves, crushed
2 teaspoons ground turmeric
2 teaspoons ground cumin
1 teaspoon ground ginger 500 ml / 2⅛ cups chicken stock or water
Juice of 2 lemons
2 flatbreads, such as pita, kmaj, or shrak
Green Shatta
SERVES 6
Combine the lentils with cold water to cover in a bowl.
In a large pot, heat 2 tablespoons of the olive oil over medium-high heat. Add the onions and sauté for 2 minutes. Add the garlic, turmeric, cumin, and ginger and continue to sauté until the onions become translucent, another 3 minutes.
Drain the lentils and add to the pot. Cover with the stock and decrease the heat to medium. Cover and cook for 20 minutes, until the lentils are soft.
Add the lemon juice and blend with a handheld blender until creamy.
In a small pan, heat the remaining 2 tablespoons of olive oil over medium-high heat. Cut the bread into strips and briefly fry in the hot oil, until lightly browned and crisp.
Serve the soup with fried bread on top and a dash of shatta.
The audio version of this story was produced by Milton Guevara. The digital version was edited by Majd Al-Waheidi.
Copyright 2024 NPR
Transcript :
LEILA FADEL, HOST:
When the war started in Gaza, Palestinian chef Fadi Kattan could not cook, not when he had friends and family trapped, not when people didn’t have food to eat.
FADI KATTAN: The conditions there are unimaginable. I don’t have the tools to be able to understand what they’re going through.
FADEL: Nor could he think about his upcoming cookbook.
KATTAN: How can I even imagine releasing a book? But, you know, my publisher is of Jewish faith. And she said, you know, now the book even has more significance.
FADEL: So now his book is out. “Bethlehem: A Celebration Of Palestinian Food” is a love letter to his hometown, to the food and the flavors of this city in the Israeli-occupied Palestinian territory of the West Bank.
KATTAN: So I started food tours in Bethlehem, and I would take people along with me to the market – very unorganized, spontaneous. It was really that energy. And then, in the book, I really wanted to be able to transmit this to people and say, look, you’re actually coming on a visit of Bethlehem with me through the recipes.
FADEL: The book is also a glimpse into the way annexation and the occupation of Palestinian land has impacted Palestinian cuisine. For example, take wild thyme – or zaatar in Arabic.
KATTAN: We were forbidden from picking wild zaatar. That changed a lot of what people did at home. And there’s many, many of those examples of how things have impacted our cuisine.
FADEL: Because it’s become illegal to pick certain plants and to…
KATTAN: Exactly. And it’s hypocritical because it’s illegal for Palestinians to do so in the West Bank, but it’s allowed for Israelis in Israel.
FADEL: It’s interesting because it’s almost – it’s not front and center of your cookbook. You know, you’re seeing these cities. You’re going into markets in Bethlehem. But then there’s just hints of it. Like, you describe the sea salt from the Dead Sea, which you say is the sharpest and the purest form of salt. And then almost as an afterthought, you’re like, by the way, Palestinians have very little access to the salt mines anymore. There’s only one left that we can go to.
KATTAN: Yeah. But, you know, it’s on purpose it is a bit of an afterthought, because what I do is cook and I celebrate Palestinian food. Whatever horror is happening because of the occupation, I try and channel it into what I’m cooking. I try channeling it into a positive. Wherever you are in the world, when you’re cooking, it is a beautiful moment. It’s a moment that is so sacred that I also refuse to let occupation be the leader of that.
(SOUNDBITE OF FABIANO DO NASCIMENTO AND VITTOR SANTOS E ORQUESTRA’S “FONTE”)
FADEL: The simplest recipe in his cookbook is a bright salad.
KATTAN: You get a fig, you cut it in four, sprinkle some olive oil on it and a dash of sumac. For me, this is, like, the purest essence of what Palestine is in summer. It’s like those three ingredients are just magic.
FADEL: There’s sayadieh samak, a spiced rice with fish, flavors of the coast, a Christmas fruitcake, too. And Kattan guided me – amateur chef over here – through one of his easier recipes, the lentil soup. It was something he always ate as a child during Lent.
So this recipe is your – this is something your mom used to make for you?
KATTAN: It’s something my mom still makes for me. It’s not really her recipe 100% because my mother loves being cheeky with her recipes, so she changes it all the time. My mother is a fantastic cook. I still call my mother every couple of days and I’m like, so how’d you cook this? And she laughs. She’s like, oh, are you going to try doing a twist on this? So it’s as close as I can get to hers, but it’s not really hers.
(SOUNDBITE OF ONIONS CRUNCHING)
FADEL: I start by chopping a couple onions I saute in olive oil, of course, which Kattan describes as a symbol of Palestinian resilience.
(SOUNDBITE OF ONIONS SIZZLING)
KATTAN: You know, olive oil is – traditionally has been extremely part and parcel of Palestine. You know, we still have olive trees that are 3,000, 4,000 years old in Palestine.
(SOUNDBITE OF DISH CLINKING)
FADEL: I add garlic, turmeric, cumin and ginger.
I saw ginger in your lentil soup. I’ve never put ginger in my lentil soup.
KATTAN: Well, you’ll have to try it.
(LAUGHTER)
FADEL: Oh, my gosh, this smells so good.
(SOUNDBITE OF DISH CLANGING)
FADEL: OK, so now what do I do?
KATTAN: Now you drain the lentils. You put them in the pot, give them a stir, you cover with stock.
FADEL: OK, so I’m doing 2 1/2 cups.
(SOUNDBITE OF STOCK POURING)
KATTAN: Decrease the heat to medium and we forget about them for 20 minutes or so.
(SOUNDBITE OF FABIANO DO NASCIMENTO AND VITTOR SANTOS E ORQUESTRA’S “FONTE”)
FADEL: Kattan says every Palestinian, all faiths, rich or poor, eats lentil soup.
KATTAN: It’s something you will see all year round in Palestine, either when people don’t have anything else to cook or when they’re fasting, the different fasts. And that’s the beauty of Palestine with its diversity. You know, it’s the Christian tradition, the Muslim tradition and different types of fasting, where people will very often break fast or during the day, if they’re Christians, during Lent, will have very light vegetarian recipes. Can you taste the lentils to see if they’re soft?
FADEL: Yeah, they’re soft.
KATTAN: They’re soft?
FADEL: They’re good.
I squeeze a couple of lemons, give it a blend and it’s creamy and comforting.
Now I’m gonna put ginger in mine. You convinced me.
KATTAN: Oh, thank you.
(SOUNDBITE OF FABIANO DO NASCIMENTO AND SAM GENDEL’S “POEIRA CACTUS”)
FADEL: Are you able to cook again?
KATTAN: I have forced myself to cook again. You know, the person who forced me to cook is actually somebody from Gaza who said, look, time is running out. We need to preserve those recipes. We need to share them with people. I think, actually, people buying the book will preserve Palestinian cuisine more than me, because they’re going to be cooking Palestinian recipes in their homes. Cooking the lentil soup with ginger, I mean, what you’re doing right now, you are preserving Palestinian cuisine more than me because I’m not cooking right now. You’re the one cooking. You’re the one preserving it.
(SOUNDBITE OF FABIANO DO NASCIMENTO AND SAM GENDEL’S “POEIRA CACTUS”)
FADEL: Fadi Kattan is a Palestinian chef out with his new book, “Bethlehem.” Thank you so much.
KATTAN: Thank you so much for having me.
(SOUNDBITE OF FABIANO DO NASCIMENTO AND SAM GENDEL’S “POEIRA CACTUS”) Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.