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Food

Why it’s time to get the Israeli nut habit

In Israelis’ love of seeds and nuts there is a nutritional - and culinary - lesson for us all.

August 27, 2009 11:00
Nuts

ByBernard Josephs, Bernard Josephs

2 min read

The taste of freshly baked sunflower seeds and roasted nuts, typically bought in 100g brown paper bags from kiosks, provides one of the greatest pleasures of Israeli street cuisine.

It is Jerusalem’s version of the hot chestnut men who used to ply their wares in the streets of London. Such is the demand among Israeli ex-pats in the UK that kosher stores and some supermarkets are now stocking seeds, known in Hebrew as garinim.

While plastic sachets of anaemic, unsalted sunflower seeds and pumpkin kernels are often marketed as whole food by health food emporiums, they bear not the slightest resemblance to the tangy garinim on sale in such places as Mehane Yehuda in Jerusalem.

There, on Friday mornings, crowds gather in front of stalls piled high with flavoursome seeds as well as salted almonds, pistachios, peanuts and (my favourite) cashew nuts.