Become a Member
Food

New flavours to cherish

Anne Shooter has tapped into the change in our Shabbat meals in her new book

February 16, 2018 12:20
Anne Shooter (Photo: Emma Lee)

By

Victoria Prever,

Victoria Prever

3 min read

Shabbat meals are changing. No longer uniformly brown and beige, our Friday night feasts are likely to be laden with the vibrant, popping colours of ruby pomegranate seeds; emerald chopped herbs and the reds, yellows and greens of Israeli salad.

Flavours have also changed. The onion, parsley and white pepper our grandmas used to season everything are often now replaced with Middle Eastern spices like za’atar, sumac and chilli.

Anne Shooter has tapped into this change in her new book, Cherish, Food to make for the people you love. The food writer, who is also head of commercial partnerships at MailOnline, feels her book reflects a new generation of balaboostas.

“We all have hummus in our fridges now. Middle Eastern foods are part of our menu. Foods like bulgar wheat, quinoa, aubergine and pomegranate molasses weren’t part of my mother’s repertoire; and in turn, the ingredients she used were different to what my grandmother cooked with” says the Pinner United Synagogue member, whose first book, Sesame and Spice, focused on Jewish baking.

To get more from Life, click here to sign up for our free Life newsletter.

Editor’s picks