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-> Recipe Collection
-> Sephardic Food
Apple pie
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Thu, Apr 28 2011, 2:07 pm
Where are there Sfardic restaurants around the world?
Anybody can share their experience? Thanks!
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yo'ma
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Thu, Apr 28 2011, 2:09 pm
What exactly do you mean by sefardic? I would say all the kosher restaurants here, in argentina, are sefardic, at least owned.
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Apple pie
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Thu, Apr 28 2011, 2:29 pm
I mean the menu, as in traditional sefardi dishes being served.
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momaleh
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Thu, Apr 28 2011, 2:36 pm
There are a lot of Moroccan restaurants, Darna in Manhattan (yum!) and several in Montreal.
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ra_mom
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Thu, Apr 28 2011, 3:20 pm
That Moroccan place in the village isn't still around, is it?
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yo'ma
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Thu, Apr 28 2011, 3:34 pm
Most of the kosher restaurants here do serve sefardi food because that's their clientelle.
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Mrs Bissli
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Thu, Apr 28 2011, 5:20 pm
Can you be a bit more specific? Are you talking about Moroccan, Buchari, Yemenite, Lebanese, Persian, Indian? Does schwarma count? Falafel/sabich stands? Oh and if you consider Italki or Roman sephardi, does pizza restaurant count? I also love the way "oriental cuisine" describes couscous or tunisienne foods in some places, as opposed to chinese or thai.
We have a few Indian, a few schwarma places. There used to be a decent Persian one but they closed down. You're unlikely to find a Iraqi or Syrian restaurants because every woman will proclaim they'll cook better than restaurants!
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yo'ma
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Thu, Apr 28 2011, 5:47 pm
Mrs Bissli wrote: | Can you be a bit more specific? Are you talking about Moroccan, Buchari, Yemenite, Lebanese, Persian, Indian? Does schwarma count? Falafel/sabich stands? Oh and if you consider Italki or Roman sephardi, does pizza restaurant count? I also love the way "oriental cuisine" describes couscous or tunisienne foods in some places, as opposed to chinese or thai.
We have a few Indian, a few schwarma places. There used to be a decent Persian one but they closed down. You're unlikely to find a Iraqi or Syrian restaurants because every woman will proclaim they'll cook better than restaurants! |
In reference to the bold, a place opened up that said oriental food and I was so excited because I thought it was chinese. I was wrong . There are no kosher chinese places here. They do have sushi places though .
We can easily get kibbe and lachmashin (sp?) in almost any kosher fleishig restaurant here. Isn't that syrian? The sefardim here are mostly syrian, I think. If I'm wrong, someone please correct me. What are some other sefardi food and I'll tell you if it's easily available.
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Mrs Bissli
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Thu, Apr 28 2011, 6:44 pm
kibbe is not exclusive to syrians, though shells are quite distinctly different by different groups (notably rice flour vs cracked wheat vs semolina) and seasoning for meat inside is differnt. Lachmajan is distinctively syrian, though.
I guess any restaurants will try to please as many customers as possible.
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yo'ma
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Thu, Apr 28 2011, 6:54 pm
Mrs Bissli wrote: | I guess any restaurants will try to please as many customers as possible. |
Pleasing customers is not only their aim, it's also to make money . I was talking to the owner of a bakery and he said the sefardim here don't like anything different. He tried making other foods, like cinnamon buns, but there were not enough customers for them .
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nylon
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Thu, Apr 28 2011, 8:59 pm
ra_mom wrote: | That Moroccan place in the village isn't still around, is it? |
Village Crown? Closed ages ago.
Colbeh has pretty good Persian food.
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LiLIsraeli
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Thu, Apr 28 2011, 9:02 pm
There's a Moroccan restaurant in Tenafly, NJ called Hamsa. It's really good!
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viznitz
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Thu, Apr 28 2011, 11:35 pm
yo'ma wrote: | Mrs Bissli wrote: | I guess any restaurants will try to please as many customers as possible. |
Pleasing customers is not only their aim, it's also to make money . I was talking to the owner of a bakery and he said the sefardim here don't like anything different. He tried making other foods, like cinnamon buns, but there were not enough customers for them . |
it's true!
my father is from argentina but he is lebanese,I think most of the sefaradim in argentina are syrians. out of the topic, I had some friends from argentina that were syrians but ultra-chassidishe ( and their families were ultra chassidishe also).do u see many around?
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Tamiri
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Fri, Apr 29 2011, 1:39 am
Israel.
Over the years, we've eaten at
Indian
Moroccan
Tunesian
Tripolitai
"Yemenite" (the only real Yemenite food is soup and their bread thingies, so they serve grilled things too)
Bucharian
Iraqui
Persian
"Turkish" which is another name for a grill. BTW Lachmajun is Turkish here.
"Lebanese" - I can't remember anything remarkable except the price
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shlomitsmum
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Mon, Jul 11 2011, 10:27 am
I went to the one in LA!!! AWESOME FOOD!!
is 10 am and now I'm craving kebab
here in toronto we have hamizrah also great food and huge portions
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miky72
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Mon, Jul 11 2011, 12:17 pm
Darna on the UWS closed right after Pesach unfortunately.
I think they still do catering but the restaurant is not there anymore
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