logo
Five Australia-based chefs on their favourite dishes to make for Eid al-Fitr

Five Australia-based chefs on their favourite dishes to make for Eid al-Fitr

The Guardian26-03-2025
Eid al-Fitr marks the end of Ramadan, taking place on 30 March or 31 March, depending on the sighting of the new moon. It's the end of a spiritual month and Muslims around the world share many Eid customs, including seeing family, preparing food and wearing new clothes.
Celebrating traditions from Palestine, Syria, Lebanon and Algeria, five Australia-based chefs share what they will be cooking this Eid.
Sanah Djelbi, co-owner of Sydney's Café Tanja
During Eid, we usually have breakfast then visit my grandmother who would have been awake for hours preparing couscous. It's a long process – the semolina is steamed, spread with butter or ghee and mixed by hand, then steamed again. The secret is to never let it touch the water. At the end, the whole house smells like buttery steam.
We serve it topped with slow-cooked vegetables and a spiced tomato-based sauce that's common in Algeria.
There's no written down recipe for anything. But that's the beauty of it: to learn to make it, you have to spend time with your family.
Sarah Shaweesh, owner of now-closed Khamsa Cafe in Sydney
Each day when we break our fast during Ramadan, I cook small dishes, catering for my guests' cravings. Eid is different – we celebrate around food all day. A substantial meal is mansaf, Palestinian whole lamb with rice, but I get most excited about ma'amoul, a cookie filled with dates, walnuts or pistachios. They taste like heaven.
In the morning, we wear new clothes, go to prayer and afterwards go visiting from house to house, starting with the eldest family member. Everywhere we go we eat ma'amoul.
When I was a kid I wasn't allowed to help with ma'amoul but, because I love to cook, eventually I was taught everything. The biscuits are made from semolina dough, flattened into discs and folded around mixtures of pounded pistachio, walnut or dates. Each ma'amoul is pressed into a mould, each one shaped differently so you know the filling, then baked and dusted with icing sugar.
Last Eid at Khamsa, we prepared ma'amoul with friends who have no family in Australia and everyone went home with a box.
Alaa El Fouani, chef and co-owner of Shareef's in Sydney
It's said loved ones who have passed away are waiting for you to greet them on Eid, so in Lebanon we would visit the cemetery early in the morning. Afterwards we'd go to my grandparents' and our grandfather gave us money to buy fireworks.
For lunch we'd have khubz harra. It's made from barbecued Lebanese bread spread with chilli and topped with shish meat, plus parsley, tomato, onion, hummus and hot chips, then rolled like shawarma.
Usually only adults barbecue but I've always loved to cook so at 14 I learned to make khubz harra. I've been in Sydney for many years but I still make it for my family every Eid.
Racha Abou Alchamat, chef-owner of Sydney catering business Racha's Syrian Kitchen
Growing up, my favourite part of Eid was gathering at my grandfather's house in Syria. My dad has nine brothers and sisters; their husbands, wives and kids made about 50 people, which is a lot to feed. We used to make kilos of vine leaves filled with rice and fatty lamb (wara'a eneb).
My aunties sat around the kitchen table, placing spoonfuls of filling on leaves and closing the edges together like rolling a cigarette. The rolled vine leaves were placed in a big pot layered with garlic, lemon, salt and pieces of lamb cutlets, neck or tongue. The fattier the meat, the nicer the flavour. Once the pot was full, flat vine leaves were laid on top, pressed down with a weight. Then the pot was filled with water, more lemon, garlic and salt and left to boil for a few hours.
When it was finished, we removed the broth, then put a big tray over the top of the pot to flip the vine leaves out. It was always like magic when the dish came out on to the tray.
I left Syria in 2007. It's just me, my husband and two kids in Sydney, and I feel sorry my kids didn't have a chance to experience Eid back home. But I try to connect with people here, sharing our culture. I often make wara'a eneb for my catering customers. I'm so happy to share my stories and food with them because I think it's important to reflect where you came from.
Huda Albardawil, chef-owner of Melbourne catering business Huda's Kitchen Rules
Sweets are very important at Eid in Palestinian culture. When I was a girl in Qatar, I remember all the women in the family would gather at my Teta's house during the last few days of Ramadan to make ka'ak, a ring-shaped biscuit filled with date paste, as well as ma'amoul.
Women would organise themselves in groups, some preparing dough, others making date paste – removing pits, adding olive oil and spices like aniseed. The whole house would fill with the scent. While they were working, they would talk and gossip. I remember watching them and feeling privileged to be part of this amazing culture.
One Eid, Teta said, 'Habibi, come next to me and do this ka'ak'. My mum protested but my Teta said, 'We need her to learn'. I'll never forget that moment. She encouraged me and I made a perfect ka'ak.
Our recipe for ka'ak comes from a long line of women in our family. When my grandmother gave it to me, she said I must keep making it as part of our Palestinian heritage. Now every Eid when I make ka'ak in Australia, I start by saying a prayer to her, to ask her soul to be with me. I feel she's all around me, giving advice and supervising. Making ka'ak was the thing she loved most, and I'll keep the tradition alive, passing it down to my children and grandchildren.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The new threat facing Australian children in daycare centres
The new threat facing Australian children in daycare centres

Daily Mail​

time3 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

The new threat facing Australian children in daycare centres

Experts are concerned that fast-tracked childcare courses could be putting young lives at risk. Traditional four-year university degrees in early education are being whittled down to just 10-month graduate diplomas as institutions cash in on an industry shortage of teachers and market 'worthless' courses to international students. The industry has come under the spotlight in recent days after Melbourne childcare worker Joshua Dale Brown, 26, was charged with over 70 child abuse offences, including the sexual penetration of a child and producing child abuse material. At Southern Cross University in regional NSW, an estimated 6,000 students have enrolled in its 10-month early education graduate diploma in the last two years. University insiders claim that the majority are international students, including older men in their 40s and 50s with corporate backgrounds. 'Childcare services are recognising that students are quite openly telling them that they are only there to get their permanent residency and that's why they are undertaking the course,' a university insider told ABC's 7.30 program. Parents should be concerned that people are coming to Australia to study childcare as a pathway to permanent residency, immigration expert Mark Glazbrook says. 'They're looking after our children and in some cases they're not attending their classes,' he told the program. 'There are a lot of education providers that are set up to deliver courses that are worthless, they're useless. This is a big concern.' University of Sydney early education professor Dr Marianne Fenech said the growing number of international enrolments was a 'cash cow for universities'. 'Employers of high quality services are telling us that the quality of graduates coming out is not what it used to be, it is not as high as it should be,' she said. Dr Fenech was alarmed to hear claims that students were placed with childcare centres that failed to meet minimum national quality standards. Southern Cross University told the program that the graduate diploma is a 'rigorous, high quality program' which includes 60 days of practical experience in early childhood education settings. It is also fully accredited by the Tertiary Education Quality and Standards Agency. 'Within 10 months, our Graduate Diploma in Education (Early Childhood) will prepare you to work in early childhood education and care services, long day care centres, and preschools,' a course description on the university website states. 'Our course covers key areas of early childhood education and care, theory, principles and practices that best support children's learning and development.' The regulator has since confirmed that it has launched a review into the university. Daily Mail Australia has contacted Southern Cross University for further comment. Parents of 1,200 children were advised to consider testing them for sexually transmitted diseases after coming into contact with Brown. The 26-year-old worked at a total of 20 childcare centres over an eight-year period between January 2017 and May 2025. Brown was not known to police before his arrest and had a valid Working With Children Check, which has since been cancelled. Police discovered evidence of the alleged horrific offending by the childcare worker while investigating 36-year-old Michael Simon Wilson. Wilson, from Hoppers Crossing, was charged with 45 child sex offences on Wednesday, including bestiality, rape and possession of child abuse material, according to court documents. It is understood Brown and Wilson are known to each other, but Wilson's charges are not linked to any childcare centre and involve different alleged victims.

I just moved to Sydney from Italy and I'm deeply bothered by how everyone behaves here - is it just me?
I just moved to Sydney from Italy and I'm deeply bothered by how everyone behaves here - is it just me?

Daily Mail​

time3 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

I just moved to Sydney from Italy and I'm deeply bothered by how everyone behaves here - is it just me?

A young woman who moved to Sydney from Milan has confessed that her everyday interactions are leaving her so confused and disheartened that she sometimes ends up in tears. In a now-viral Reddit post, the Italian woman who has lived Down Under for four months described how she feels 'people are annoyed with [her]' every time she goes about her day - and she's struggling to understand why. 'I recently moved to Sydney from Milan and I'm finding daily interactions pretty frustrating,' she wrote. 'I have a persistent feeling that people are annoyed with me, and I can't quite pinpoint why. Sometimes I even cry after just running errands because I don't understand what's going on.' The woman explained that although she's well-travelled and used to city life - having spent time in both Los Angeles and New York - Sydney's social cues feel completely alien. 'In [LA or NYC ] I could easily read people's expressions and intentions. Even if people were blunt or cold, I never took it personally. But here in Sydney, I'm completely lost,' she said. She wondered whether her Italian-American accent or her fashion choices - what she described as 'too Milan' - could be putting people off, but was at a loss to explain the disconnect. One social custom in particular has her feeling even more out of place: the casual 'how are you today?' greeting. 'In Italy, we don't really have this, and in LA it felt easy and natural,' she explained. 'But here, I often get what feels like an annoyed or stiff reaction. I never know how much warmth to put into my response, or if I'm doing something wrong.' She also suggested that Aussies seemed 'dissociated' in public settings - something many expats agreed with her on. 'I keep reading everywhere about how nice Australians are. That's true for my partner (who is from the suburbs, though), his family, and pretty much everyone I meet through him,' she said. 'But then he leaves for work, and I go run my errands, and everyone is... just as you said, dissociated.' Despite her growing unease, the woman shared that most people do seem to 'loosen up' slightly after a few minutes of conversation - a small glimmer of hope as she tries to integrate into her new home, where she lives with her Australian fiancé. The post struck a nerve, especially with expats and Australians who had lived abroad and returned home. 'I'm Australian but spent over a decade in the US - and I felt the exact same way coming home,' one person replied. 'Americans are conditioned for cheerfulness and extroversion. Australians can seem cold by comparison - but it's really just a cultural difference.' Others chimed in with practical advice: 'If you're enthusiastically asking strangers "How are you today?" in Sydney, people might think you're a charity fundraiser,' one user said bluntly. 'Try "How's it going?" instead. The more casual, the better,' a second advised. Another added, 'When Australians say "how are you", it's really just a long version of "hello". They're not actually asking for a full update on your life.' Aussies also warned that striking up casual conversation with strangers in the city can sometimes backfire. 'In Sydney, people often assume anyone trying to chat them up in public either wants something or is a bit unhinged. It's not personal.' But not everyone thought the issue was purely cultural. 'It's most likely your accent. For most Australians, an American accent is grating,' one sensationally claimed. Despite the mixed responses, many agreed the woman's experience touches on a deeper truth about adjusting to Australian social norms, particularly for those used to more outwardly expressive cultures.

Much-loved community centre in Glasgow to have new operator
Much-loved community centre in Glasgow to have new operator

Glasgow Times

time11 hours ago

  • Glasgow Times

Much-loved community centre in Glasgow to have new operator

The Halliday Foundation, a Glasgow-based charity, has been named the preferred new operator for the Reidvale Neighbourhood Centre in Dennistoun, following a competitive selection process led by Reidvale Housing Association (RHA). The charity, known for its work tackling poverty, homelessness, and social isolation, delivers a range of community-led services, including food provision, wellbeing support, and employability programmes. Denise Dempsey, chairperson at RHA, said: "This is a space that holds deep significance for the entire community, and reaching this important stage brings us closer to securing its long-term future. Read more: Do you know about Lanarkshire's music legends? This exhibition explains all 'We are now in active discussions with the Halliday Foundation and expect to finalise the agreement shortly. 'Throughout this process, we will ensure to keep tenants and stakeholders informed every step of the way. 'Crucially, the centre will remain open throughout, ensuring continued access for the groups and individuals who rely on it daily.' RHA began reviewing the centre's future after it was found to be operating without a formal lease agreement. The evaluation process considered financial resilience and the ability to deliver services tailored to the needs of the Dennistoun community. Julie Smillie, interim director at RHA, said: "It's been a long journey, and we are confident the Halliday Foundation is the right organisation to take the centre forward and help it thrive. "We truly believe the centre has a bright future ahead. "It will continue to be that special place where people come together, whether it's for classes, community events, catching up with neighbours or just feeling part of something." A formal agreement is expected to be finalised in July, with a handover period to follow. The move forms part of RHA's wider 10-year strategic plan, which focuses on governance, service quality, and community empowerment. Founded in 1975, Reidvale Housing Association is one of Scotland's oldest community-led housing bodies.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store