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Food

Bringing the Bible back to our plates

Moshe Basson is passionate about cooking with Israel’s ancient and native foods

May 21, 2015 15:28
Moshe Basson’s menus are peppered with ingredients foraged from the hillsides around Jerusalem. (Photo: Ben Yuster)

ByVictoria Prever, Victoria Prever

3 min read

Foraging and freekeh (an ancient grain) may be new and trendy for foodies round these parts, but both have been on Jerusalem-based chef Moshe Basson's menu for years. Known as "Israel's biblical chef", Basson - whose family emigrated to Israel as refugees from Iraq in the 1950s when he was nine months old - has a range of culinary influences and a long-standing interest in the native foods of his country.

"When I started, I mixed the cooking styles of my mother and grandmother with herbs from the foods of the Arabs who lived near us," he says. "Many of these, like hyssop, za'atar and wild thyme, had their roots in biblical times."

The Arab women and goatherds of the villages near where he grew up taught him how to forage for these herbs on the hillside around his home. His father taught him the names and culinary and medicinal uses of the plants that they grew in their home garden. The Bassons had arrived penniless, and were housed in a nine by 11ft aluminium shed with neither electricity nor water. His father's hard graft took them out of this poverty.

"We had been banned from taking jewellery with us when we left Iraq, but my father managed to smuggle out some gold. With that, my family were able to buy a bakery on the edge of Jerusalem."