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Emirati chef Mariam Al Mansoori on sharing UAE cuisine with the world
Emirati chef Mariam Al Mansoori on sharing UAE cuisine with the world

Khaleej Times

time08-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Khaleej Times

Emirati chef Mariam Al Mansoori on sharing UAE cuisine with the world

If you want to know the history of a place, observe its cuisine. The flavours that garnish a plate tell the story of the visitors who carried ingredients, spices, and recipes to its shores. Each morsel speaks of a chef enthralled with the alchemy of cooking and techniques that have evolved over time. Each cut of meat cooks differently, absorbs tastes differently, and presents in a way special to its new home. For a trading hub like the UAE, the food is its medal of honour, one that recollects its nomadic roots that witnessed cooking techniques such as baking bread over coal, stone, or sand; community, for meals were not a solo activity but moments filled with laughter and news of other members; and foreign exchanges — tales written in fine spice blends from overseas. For Mariam Al Mansoori, who calls it her responsibility to teach others about her cultural heritage, the journey of discovery began at home with her six children when she didn't even know she wanted to be a chef. She has since made history as the first Emirati to win the Gold Award for 'Best in Culinary Art' from France; been the driving force of the Abu Dhabi-based Montauk Boutique Café and Restaurant, and most recently opened a spot in Sharjah called Kashtat Amina, which draws from her mum and grandmum's recipe books to offer authentic Emirati fare. And she has no plans of slowing down. As a child, Mariam dreamt of being a doctor, an engineer, or a teacher. By the time she got married, she had earned her spot as a petroleum and water development engineer. The subject of her reverie began to shift as she began to think of owning her own space, of doing her own thing. 'But I didn't know what it would be,' she confesses. It was only when she got married and had children that the abstract idea began to take shape. 'I had begun reading up more about healthy food and Emirati cuisine. Our cuisine talks a lot through our food. There is a lot of transfer of knowledge, culture, habits, and hospitality that can be communicated through food,' she says. When she travelled, she recalls, she would knock on commercial kitchens and ask to look inside, to learn about the habits and techniques of other cultures as well. 'In some of them, you need to pay for your dish and then you can learn how to cook it,' she explains. When her kids began to praise her efforts, she began to dream bigger. 'My kids and my husband would say complimentary things about the food I made. Some of them would say, 'Mama, we only want to eat the food you cook'. It felt like a sign — like I needed to do more. And suddenly, God made all the barriers disappear — and I could begin my cooking journey,' she says. With her latest enterprise, she wants to put an old debate to rest: is Arabic cuisine the same as Emirati fare? She hums: 'We have a lot of dishes that maybe have the same ingredients, but the difference is in the technique of cooking, the presentation, the names of the dishes, and the occasions during which the dishes are served. So, they have rice, we have rice. They have beef, we have beef. We all grill, but the difference is in the spices we use, in the methods we employ.' In the works are plans for insightful conversations, behind-the-scenes, in-the-kitchen engagements, and even cooking classes. 'Kashtat Amina will be like a landmark where we will teach visitors and the younger generation about our food, our palate,' she says. The restaurant is named after her mother, Amina, and weighs in on the dialogue of identity and what it means in a globalised context where ingredients are available in plenty and from across the world. The dishes are an amalgamation of the old and the new, the familiar and unfamiliar. 'It's not because of some trend that we use things grown locally. We feel that this is a responsibility — to the land we are from and proud of. Plus, we need to encourage the local farmers. This is something important for sustainability within the country. I'm also trying my best to not have lots of wastage. And we are looking into eco-packaging,' she adds. The idea is to have a responsible brand in line with government plans, and one that showcases the best of the country, from fruits and vegetables to delicacies. Jostling motherhood and entrepreneurship over the years, Mariam explains, requires focus and the precision of a tailor on a deadline running out of cloth. 'You need to prioritise the things that are important to you and cut out things that are not. As a mum, I also know that children grow up quickly and if you don't prioritise your time with them, you miss a lot of things. If you cannot involve them in what you are doing, like I do, you need to be strict about time management,' she says. 'I involve my kids in our businesses — and in fact, I have two junior chefs,' she says, smiling. 'When we are home, we speak the same language, we are all interested in this one thing: food.' 'I am a traditional mum. I am attached to the past, so I bring a tray with everything, from bread to protein to salad to where the kids are. I ask them what they want in their sandwiches and I make it more than cooking. I make it like storytelling time, or an activity. Sometimes, we do cooking competitions between the kids, and share the results on TikTok. It gives them a boost. Even when we have family dinners or movie nights, they revolve around food. It is a language that everyone understands at home,' she adds. This is her support system and gives her the strength to carry on no matter what. Of course, she says, challenges do appear, and when they do, you may need some help navigating the icebergs. 'But it's something you must also do for yourself. You can look in the mirror every morning and say to yourself: 'I am a strong woman. I can do this'.' It's just as important to keep an eye on your end goal. 'This is for my family, my kids, my UAE. My vision is to make a place in the world for the Emirati cuisine,' she explains. And she's determined to do so, one meal at a time.

Truffled rabbit legs, a touch of yuzu* and plates of Granny Erskine's shortbread... how Andy and Kim could swap Grand Slams for Michelin stars
Truffled rabbit legs, a touch of yuzu* and plates of Granny Erskine's shortbread... how Andy and Kim could swap Grand Slams for Michelin stars

Daily Mail​

time27-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Daily Mail​

Truffled rabbit legs, a touch of yuzu* and plates of Granny Erskine's shortbread... how Andy and Kim could swap Grand Slams for Michelin stars

Midway through a hitherto flawless fine dining experience, I wonder if it is possible that the kitchen has gone rogue. I have just been presented with a dish that I did not ask for. Rabbit was the starter on the à la carte menu that I instinctively avoided. Now, here was a serving of it arriving as a surprise intermediate course, compliments of the chef. It is, I am told, a 'signature dish'. He feels I should give it a try. It is not the first time James Mearing has flirted with danger in matching his culinary artistry with choosy palates. He did it six months ago when the stakes were very much higher. He was applying for the job of executive head chef of Cromlix, the magnificent mansion house hotel in Stirlingshire owned by tennis star Andy Murray and his wife Kim. His challenge was to rustle up two courses in two hours and present them to a panel of the hotel's top brass, including the departing chef Darin Campbell and Mrs Murray herself. How was he to know that salmon was not a dish to which she was partial? With the clock ticking and flying solo in a kitchen he had never set foot in before, he set about preparing his salmon starter, pairing it with cucumber, dill and the Japanese citrus fruit yuzu. He followed this up with a main course of venison, which highlighted his penchant for 'celebrating the product' by incorporating multiple uses of the meat in the finished dish. Mr Mearing was the latest in a series of candidates to cook for Mrs Murray and her team in the nerve-shredding final phase of the recruitment process – and he was painfully aware of the exacting standards they were seeking. Weeks earlier, the hotel was among a small batch of recipients of a Michelin key – a new award recognising the best places to stay across the globe. Clearly, they would now be shooting for a Michelin star for their restaurant. Could this London-born 41-year-old be the man to earn one for them? 'It's always challenging coming into a kitchen that you've never been in before,' he tells me. 'But this one was particularly fast-paced – having to produce high-level food within two hours.' He adds: 'I think my nature is probably intrinsic to quite a lot of chefs. We are constantly seeking perfection and our day-to-day is that never-ending search for perfection that doesn't really exist.' How close to perfect could his efforts possibly be in an alien kitchen, with no one to assist him, a time frame allowing no margin for error and a key judge who, unbeknown to him, did not enjoy salmon? Well, he had given it his best. The phone call came later that day as he, his Spanish wife Melissa and their two young children began their eight-hour drive home to Dorset. It was hotel manager Barry Makin – one of the tasting panel – telling him that the job was his. Normally they would have deliberated for a few days and let the process run, he told the chef, before adding: 'But it was clearly you by a long way.' And the verdict from Mrs Murray? 'Chef James's food is incredible. I didn't used to like salmon, but he has totally converted me with the way he cooks it.' So who is the culinary wizard confounding his new employer's expectations of dishes she thought were not for her? Certainly he is no stranger to kitchens dripping with accolades. He was, until he started at Cromlix in February, executive chef at Summer Lodge Country House Hotel and Restaurant in Evershot, Dorset, where he held three AA rosettes. Prior to that, at the Gainsborough Bath Spa he was instrumental in their securing three rosettes and he worked at the Michelin-starred Wild Rabbit in the Cotswolds. So how does he fancy his chances of complementing Sir Andy's tennis glories with elite status in the no less competitive world of fine dining? 'Our ambition is to be the best we can be and be better tomorrow than we were today,' he says. 'A Michelin star takes a great level of work and consistency and imagination and creativity and drive and we will put every bit of that into our work. But, ultimately, we cook for our guests, and we cook for each other a bit as well. 'If the combination of all that work and endeavour is a Michelin star then we would be incredibly honoured and thrilled, but we can only hope to reach those heights. We certainly can't presume that we will.' On arrival for dinner and an overnight stay, the first offering I sample is not in the restaurant but in the bedroom. And the recipe is not Mr Mearing's but Granny Erskine's. Yes, Andy Murray's maternal grandmother Shirley, 91, is the brains behind the complimentary shortbread which greets every guest. If it was good enough to become a family fixture at Wimbledon and for her daughter Judy to hand round when she was appearing on Strictly, then it is good enough too – easily – to form a delightful personal touch in five-star accommodation. What she must make of her grandson now becoming an ambassador for a rival operation – Walker's Shortbread – is another matter. My pre-dinner gin is created with botanicals grown on the 34-acre Cromlix estate – and much that finds its way onto the menu comes from the 'kitchen garden' outside. Eschewing the rabbit starter with barely a glance, I order the 'cured Mowi Scottish salmon mosaic, teriyaki slaw, ponzu, furikake beetroot, kombu dashi' and refrain from sharing that I am far from clear what some of these ingredients are. The chef explains: 'We are trying to highlight that produce in a beautiful way, so we cure it and it's just really delicately treated.' Is the salmon even cooked? I am getting a dreamy sushi vibe. 'It's actually just really gently poached… and it's seasoned with some spring onions and spring produce that we are having through the door and that's what gives that kind of mosaic effect.' The effect for me – unlike Mrs Murray, a salmon lover – is exquisite. How is it possible to have eaten this fish so many times and yet be discovering it anew? And so to the dish I never ordered: duo of rabbit, stuffed saddle, truffled leg terrine, BBQ leek, pickled walnut, truffle jus. 'Generally, in a menu, rabbit is not something you see too often,' says the chef. 'So that is an important part of what we do – to try to offer our guests something they can't just do at home or see every day.' It was a former mentor who helped start him on his rabbit epiphany. 'I remember vividly the turn that my experience in the kitchen took when I had a great chef and we were so passionate about the food we could talk about it and say, 'Wouldn't it be great if we could do this?' He was like, 'Do it. Put it on a plate. Let's give it a try. It might work.'' Well, in the same spirit, I am giving it a try – and now trying more and more. Suddenly I am gushing with gratitude for this extra dish, the bounty of unexplored flavours it has unlocked, the panache of the presentation. His twist on it is a running theme in his cooking. He uses the whole animal – saddle, shoulder, legs, carcass, the lot – and creates terrine and jus accompaniments whose root ingredient is the creature itself. As Mrs Murray before me was converted to salmon, so I am converted to rabbit – from this kitchen at any rate. We move to the main event – 'salt aged St Bride's duck, poached rhubarb, baked kohlrabi, red chicory, five spice duck jus'. Mr Mearing presents it in person at my table and, as he explains the dish, gently pours some of that five spice duck jus onto my plate. The root ingredient here is a roasted mixture of the wings and carcass. 'The duck is another great one where we use the whole bird,' he says, almost superfluously. Of course they do. It is the Mearing way – 'celebrate the product'. And, in doing so, perhaps, reintroduce it to those who assume they know it already. I was duly enchanted by this delicate melange of the finest Scottish produce, garden grown delights and the lightest tickle of Asian influence that is a recurring theme in his cooking. What, then, is Mr Mearing's management style in the quest for perfection. Does he turn the air blue in the kitchen like some chefs we know? 'Certainly far from Gordon Ramsay,' he says. 'Very calm. That goes into my approach to cooking and managing my team as well. 'I want Cromlix to be an incredible experience for our guests, but I really want it to be an incredible journey for the people that come and join the team here too. 'I'm trying to create a space of nurturing and creativity so that it will be a part of their story that they can say 'I was at Cromlix' and they wear that like a badge they are proud of.' Clearly, the hotel near Dunblane where the Murrays used to go for family celebrations has also been on a journey since the tennis star bought it for £1.8million months before winning his first Wimbledon in 2013. He and his bride had their wedding reception there in 2015 and, in recent years, she has played an increasingly prominent role in shaping it. Apart from its tennis court – complete with an umpire's chair once used in a match between Murray and Roger Federer – there are few nods to the illustrious sporting career of its co-owner. The feel is of a luxury woodland retreat, an oasis of calm and rural opulence just two miles from the A9 dual carriageway which you soon forget is even there. Laid out on the floor and on pegs in the entrance hall is a selection of Barbour wellies and waxed jackets for anyone who fancies taking a stroll around the grounds. There is a croquet lawn and garden chess. The rooms are named not after tennis tournaments but wild flowers growing on the estate. I was in Allium – whose enormous bathroom is justifiably described as 'show-stopping' – and next door was Fennel. All were given the personal Kim Murray touch in a 2023 refurbishment. And she has not finished yet. In January the hotel will close for four months while a new 70-cover restaurant wing and three ground-floor bedrooms are added. The stately 'garden room', meanwhile, will be transformed into an intimate, fine dining 'tasting menu' restaurant and the glasshouse – where meals are currently served – will be given over exclusively to afternoon tea. For Mr Mearing, the owners' sense of ambition was a key reason why he wanted the job so badly, even if it did mean uprooting his family from the south coast of England. He says: 'If you've got owners that are so passionate and pouring so much into the place then you know that you're on a journey and it's going somewhere, and that's great.' Now that he knows the hotel is on their radar, does he think he'll know the next time Michelin experts are in his midst? Well, he says, the hotel had no idea anyone had been there prior to its award of a Michelin key. 'That's the beauty of it because, every day, you have to set out to reach that level. That's why, as I say, we just try to be the best we can be for our guests. You can't just put on a show for one day, knowing that someone is coming. 'You just have to operate at that level and see what comes.' Although Mr Mearing has cooked on a number of occasions for Mrs Murray, the challenge of catering for her other half – a sushi and Asian food lover – awaits. The two have yet to meet. When they do, the tennis star may advise chef on which school to choose for his children, Molly-Jane, three, and Matteo, one. Currently their mum is looking at Murray's old one, Dunblane Primary. I can already advise Murray on what to choose when he next swings by Cromlix for a bite. Go for the salmon, Andy. And the rabbit. And the duck. They're gamechangers.

LMD partners with Baky Hospitality to launch landmark dining destination at One Ninety
LMD partners with Baky Hospitality to launch landmark dining destination at One Ninety

Zawya

time04-06-2025

  • Business
  • Zawya

LMD partners with Baky Hospitality to launch landmark dining destination at One Ninety

Egypt - LMD (Landmark Developments), a leading real estate developer in Egypt, has announced a strategic partnership with Baky Hospitality Group to launch a signature fine dining concept at its flagship mixed-use development, One Ninety, in New Cairo. Set to open by the end of 2026, the 250-seat venue will offer an immersive dining experience with both indoor and outdoor spaces, designed to complement the distinctive architecture and community ethos of One Ninety. This collaboration brings Baky Hospitality's acclaimed culinary artistry to the heart of the development. Known for redefining upscale dining in Egypt, Baky Hospitality's award-winning portfolio includes celebrated concepts such as Sachi, Kazoku, Reif Kushiyaki, and Lexie's—each renowned for their world-class service, meticulously curated menus, and distinctive ambience. 'Partnering with Baky Hospitality reflects our commitment to delivering world-class experiences across every dimension of One Ninety,' said Amr Sultan, CEO of LMD. 'This collaboration adds a dynamic new layer to our lifestyle offering, underscoring our shared values of innovation, excellence, and quality.' Ayman Baky, Founder of Baky Hospitality Group, said: 'This partnership marks a major milestone for us. Joining forces with LMD allows us to bring our signature concepts to a wider audience, and we look forward to becoming a cornerstone of the vibrant One Ninety community.' Designed as more than a restaurant, the new concept will serve as a lifestyle anchor within One Ninety—offering a contemporary yet timeless culinary journey that fuses creativity with sophistication. The partnership between LMD and Baky Hospitality is poised to set a new benchmark for the integration of luxury dining within Egypt's evolving real estate landscape, positioning One Ninety as a destination where culture, cuisine, and community converge. © 2024 Daily News Egypt. Provided by SyndiGate Media Inc. (

André Chiang on Raffles Singapore homecoming as chef and writer, and why hotel is a mosaic
André Chiang on Raffles Singapore homecoming as chef and writer, and why hotel is a mosaic

South China Morning Post

time11-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • South China Morning Post

André Chiang on Raffles Singapore homecoming as chef and writer, and why hotel is a mosaic

Raffles Hotel Singapore has named Taiwanese chef André Chiang, best known for his genre-defying modern French cuisine at the now-closed Restaurant André, as its newest writer-in-residence. Advertisement The hotel has long been associated with literary greats such as Rudyard Kipling and Joseph Conrad, who were among its earliest guests. The programme, launched in 2019 and now in its fourth edition, was designed to nurture creative writing talent. Chiang follows in the footsteps of Oxford-born travel writer Pico Iyer , Singaporean poet Madeleine Lee, and New Zealand author and journalist Vicki Virtue. Notably, he will be the first chef to take part in the programme. Chiang's new book Fragments of Time will be sold at Raffles Singapore and online. Photo: Raffles Hotel Singapore As part of the project, Chiang has produced Fragments of Time, a 200-page meditation on heritage, light and the art of preserving tradition. Advertisement

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