All posts tagged: travel

Food Fit for Pharoahs

As a child, I dreamt of becoming an international correspondent, dodging bullets to get the story that would change the world for the better. Instead of global strife I’ve ended up with a safer beat, covering culinary trends. Every now and then, though, my childhood fantasy collides with my adult reality and a place that I’ve visited or topic on which I’ve reported shoots to the top of the day’s headlines. Such is the case with Egypt. Last fall I spent several weeks in this ancient North African land. During my stay I talked to locals about politics, education, and, of course, food. Strangely enough, I had known the least about the cuisine. Although I had researched it before leaving, I had found little on that topic for Egyptian cuisine often gets lumped under the heading of Middle Eastern or Mediterranean cooking. While both in the Middle East and along the Mediterranean, Egypt nonetheless possesses its own distinct flavors and history. Take, for instance, ful medammes. This traditional dish of fava beans dates back to …

The Toasted Cheese Sandwiches of Iceland

A wanderlust, I am happiest with my feet firmly planted in someone else’s land.  Dump me off on a cracked tarmac, slap a stamp in my passport, shuffle me through customs and feel my pulse race.  Travel clears my head, opens my eyes and enlivens my life in countless ways.   One of the biggest impacts that roaming the globe has had is in terms of cuisine.  Where once I limited myself to the basic foods of my childhood, I now dabble in delicacies from Asia, Africa, Europe and Latin America.  Anything that I taste and enjoy overseas I later attempt to replicate in my kitchen.    When my husband Sean and I first discussed visiting Iceland in the spring of 2000, I assumed that I would sample such local delicacies as shark, herring and turnips.  I imagined the Icelandic-themed dinner party that I would later host, one featuring the culinary highlights of the country.    Seven years later “Icelandic Night” has yet to take place.   The delay is not due to snobbery, laziness or distate.  Rather it has to do with our limited experiences with the native foods of this highly productive and prosperous country. Our trip began on the western …