Shuk: From Market to Table, the Heart of Israeli Home Cooking
Shuk: From Market to Table, the Heart of Israeli Home Cooking book cover

Shuk: From Market to Table, the Heart of Israeli Home Cooking

Price
$23.99
Format
Hardcover
Pages
368
Publisher
Artisan
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1579656720
Dimensions
8.25 x 1.13 x 10.25 inches
Weight
3.09 pounds

Description

Named a Best New Cookbook for Fall 2019 by Publishers Weekly , Epicurious and Robb Report “SHUKxa0shouts ‘Cook me!” from every vibrant page.” — Boston Globe “If your knowledge of Israeli cooking starts and ends withxa0Ottolenghi, we have a new book for you. Shuk . . . provides both approachable recipes and an education in Israeli eating. The detailed instructions on the building blocks of Israeli cuisine, like a six panel labneh photo series, will comfort even the most timid of cooks, while the border-crossing dishes—like a fragrant Ethiopian Doro Wot—provide insight into what a modern day Israelite eats. If you're visiting Tel Aviv any time soon or just dreaming of it, this book doubles as travel inspiration: Lush photo essays from a handful of choice outdoor markets, or shuks , appear between recipes.” — Epicurious “Gorgeously designed . . . an excellent introduction to the cuisine. Part cookbook, part photo essay, part travelogue, Admony and Gur pay homage to thexa0shuks – free-form marketplaces – where they find culinary inspiration. Charming little essays highlighting the authors' favorite vendors and markets are strewn throughout its pages, telling the reader best practices for their visit and highlighting each market's particular charms. . . . For all their beauty, many of the dishes in Shuk are surprisingly simple, highlighting the fresh flavors of vegetables and herbs. It's a book that insists on its own usefulness, despite the glossy look that might tempt you to keep it safely tucked away on a coffee table.” — Austin Chronicle “Do not read this book hungry!” — Atlanta Jewish Times “Fascinating. . . . Scrumptious.” — New York Journal of Books “Admony ( Balaboosta ), who owns the restaurants Balaboosta and Taim in New York City, and Gur ( Jewish Soul Food ) excel at crafting recipes for Israel’s flavorful melting-pot cuisine, and they organize this fascinating cookbook around eight shuks , or markets. They include Tel Aviv’s Levinsky Market, which houses a stall selling roasted seeds and nuts and a spice store that traffics in potions and powders reputed to “drive away an evil eye, lift a curse, or help you find your soul mate.” Dishes are equally intriguing: a chopped salad of avocado and kohlrabi highlights the country’s abundant produce. Traditional selections and clever inventions intermingle, the latter exemplified by challah braided around mushrooms and za’atar, and, in a chapter on stuffed items, a cake of cabbage leaves encasing a filling of pine nuts, almonds, pistachios, ground beef, and rice. A chapter on couscous includes a brace of stews for ladling over the pasta, as well as two options for creating couscous from scratch. A grilling primer features whole fish, kebabs, and arayes—pitas stuffed with beef and lamb and cooked over a flame. Sidebars range from suggestions for optimizing Israeli salad to an explanation of the evolution of date syrup. This energetic and exciting volume serves as an edifying deep dive into Israeli food market culture and cuisine.” — Publishers Weekly , starred review “A collection of recipes that almost literally begs to jump from page to kitchen, oven, and barbecue. . . . Dishes reflect a true love of the finest ingredients and the 60-plus ethnicities that comprise Israel. . . [These are] foods that resonate in hearts and souls.” — Booklist , starred review “Recipes feature Israeli staples from salads, rice, meats, flatbreads, and soups as diverse as the country itself. . . . The authors’ cultural notes provide context for the recipes and a better understanding of the region and cuisine. Most intriguingly, interspersed between the recipes are profiles and photographs of eight of the author’s favorite shuks. VERDICT A colorful, flavorful tour of the many tastes of Israel, as well as many other Middle Eastern favorites, nicely packaged for home chefs.” — Library Journal “Einat and Janna’s journey into the vibrant world of Israeli food is one you seriously want to join. It covers everything from the famous chopped salads to hummus (of course!) to couscous to chicken to cheesecake—and it’s laid out beautifully by two skillful experts.” —Yotam Ottolenghi, chef and author of Jerusalem and Plenty “I am devouring Einat Admony and Janna Gur’s Shuk . This book superbly illustrates how Einat creates layers of flavor with recipes that are accessible for the home cook. And nobody knows the Israeli market scene better than Janna Gur. Together they have collaborated on a work that not only brings the Israelixa0shukxa0(marketplace) alive, but also gives the reader wonderful tips and even more wonderful recipes.” —Joan Nathan, author of King Solomon’s Table “ Shuk is the kind of cookbook you have to tear yourself away from—direct, insightful, bursting with color and flavor. Einat’s beautiful recipes and knowledge of Israeli markets will lure you in, change what you thought you knew about Israeli food, and deeply satisfy your soul.” — Gail Simmons, food expert, TV host, and author of Bringing It Home “Shukxa0gathers the many cultures of Israel and their vibrant food traditions into one soulful, rich cookbook. Lucky us—what a great collection!” —Jenn Louis, chef and author of The Book of Greens “So much more than a cookbook— Shuk is a transporting adventure through Israel’s spirited markets, sun-drenched seasons, and delicious intercultural exchanges. Each colorful recipe is every bit as approachable, comforting, and joyful as Einat and her beloved restaurants.” —Danny Meyer, author and founder/CEO of Union Square Hospitality Group Einat Admony is the author of Balaboosta and chef/owner of New York City’s popular Balaboosta, Kish-Kash, and Taïm restaurants, which have been featured in The New Yorker , the New York Times , and New York magazine, among many other newspapers, magazines, and websites. When Admony is not at her restaurants, she can be found at her home in Brooklyn, cooking for the crowd of family and friends who regularly gather around her dining table. Janna Gur was born in Riga, Latvia, and immigrated to Israel in 1974. She is the founder of Al Hashulchan , the premier Israeli food and wine magazine, which she edited for almost 30 years. Gur is the author of The Book of New Israeli Food and Jewish Soul Food: From Minsk to Marrakesh and has written and/or edited nearly 40 other cookbooks. She lives in Tel Aviv.

Features & Highlights

  • A
  • Library Journal
  • Best Cookbook of the Year
  • IACP Award Finalist
  • “SHUK shouts ‘Cook me!” from every vibrant page.” —
  • Boston Globe
  • “Fascinating. . . . This energetic and exciting volume serves as an edifying deep dive into Israeli food market culture and cuisine.”
  • Publishers Weekly
  • , starred review
  • With
  • Shuk
  • , home cooks everywhere can now inhale the fragrances and taste the flavors of the vivacious culinary mash-up that is today’s Israel. The book takes you deeper into this trending cuisine, through the combined expertise of the authors, chef Einat Admony of Balaboosta and food writer Janna Gur. Admony’s long-simmered stews, herb-dominant rice pilafs, toasted-nut-studded grain salads, and of course loads of vegetable dishes—from snappy, fresh, and raw to roasted every way you can think of—will open your eyes and your palate to the complex nuances of Jewish food and culture. The book also includes authoritative primers on the well-loved pillars of the cuisine, including chopped salad, hummus, tabboulehs, rich and inventive
  • shakshukas
  • , and even hand-rolled couscous with festive partners such as tangy quick pickles, rich pepper compotes, and deeply flavored condiments. Through gorgeous photo essays of nine celebrated
  • shuks
  • , you’ll feel the vibrancy and centrality of the local markets, which are so much more than simply shopping venues—they’re the beating heart of the country. With more than 140 recipes,
  • Shuk
  • presents Jewish dishes with roots in Persia, Yemen, Libya, the Balkans, the Levant, and all the regions that contribute to the evolving food scene in Israel. The ingredients are familiar, but the combinations and techniques are surprising. With
  • Shuk
  • in your kitchen, you’ll soon be cooking with the warmth and passion of an Israeli, creating the treasures of this multicultural table in your own home.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(216)
★★★★
25%
(90)
★★★
15%
(54)
★★
7%
(25)
-7%
(-25)

Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

The greatest Israeli cookbook!

I am a home cook and baker, a professional chef and baker, Owner of a legendary restaurant and culinary destination, a collector of international and national cookbooks (thousands of books) and a gardener.
About a third of books on my shelves are about the various regional cuisines of North Africa, the Mediterranean basin, the middle East and some wonderful Israeli cookbooks, old and mostly new, and that includes all of Yotam Ottolengi's Israeli/Palestinian inspired publications.
I'm not a recipe follower at large, but certainly an avid reader. In this case I have cooked several dishes and followed the recipes to a T. The results were so delicious and inspiring, leaving you with a taste for more...and more did I ever cooked, with same celebrated results.
The SHUK is in my opinion the one and only book that transport the reader to a place, a time and a people in such direct and authentic celebration of the foods of the MARKET - SHUK in Hebrew. Old world foods and new variations on legendary dishes handled down from markets to markets, families to families, crossing borders and continents. SHUK teaches you, conceptually and visually, that food is BEAUTIFUL...no needs here for edible flowers and unappealing foams and ridicules "artsy" emphasis on presentation and plating.
It is a book about the high art of the real foods of the great markets of Israel...makes you want to travel and eat your breakfast, lunch and dinner from one SHUK to another.
18 people found this helpful
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The next best thing to actually spending a day at a shuk

Just two weeks after SABABA, which is based in the Tel Aviv SHUK, comes a book dedicated to visits to 8 major Israeli shuks (open air marketplaces, mazes of stalls and stands). Einat would shop as a child in Tel Aviv with her father at the century old Shuk Hacarmel. They would buy “Mizrachi” ingredients, since her mother was Persian who grew up in an Iraqi household and her father grew up in the Yemenite quarter. Janna first visited loud, sensual, boisterous Shuk Hacarmel as a teen, fresh from the politeness of Nordic Latvia. The shuks they visit in this book are: Levinsky (with roots in Salonika), HaCarmel, the welcoming T.A. HaTikva, Hanamal (the relatively new market of sixty stalls in Tel Aviv's old Port), Mahane Yehuda in Jerusalem, Ha'ir Haatika in Jerusalem's Old City (home of Arafat/Nazmi Hummus), Haifa's Wadi Nasnas, and Shuk Akko (the Old Akko Market), and from them they bring the shuks into your home kitchen.

For each market they list a few of their favorite stalls/shops. There are fourteen chapters with over 13 dozen recipes. The chapters are Salad All Day; Cauliflower and Eggplant; Dairy and Eggs for Breakfast and for Dinner; Mad About Chicken; All About the Rice; Ktzitzot: Patties, Latkes, and Meatballs; Soups to Comfort and Refresh; Deliciously Stuffed; The Couscous Table, The Flavor of Fire; Flatbreads, Traditional Breads, and Savory Pies; and... Sweet Endings.

They recommend about a dozen items for your pantry, and another dozen spices, including zaatar sumac, hawaij, ras el hanout, cinnamon, cumin, dried mint, and turmeric. Actually, just in the pantry intro, they share several recipes for sumac mayo; dressings; lemon and mint pesto; chermoula (cumin, parsely, cilantro, coriander, paprika, oil, lemon) for fish; dukkah; harissas; olives; and s'chugs.

The Salad chapter begins with Israeli Salad, and a list of salad rules. Some other salads of interest are a cerviche' chopped avocado, cucumber and kohlrabi (did you know Israelis adore kohlrabi); spicy tomato and garlic with tahini; three-tomato with sun-dried tomato dressing; caramelized fennel and radicchio with Arak Vinaigrette; orange and olive with harissa vinaigrette; and fresh mango with AMBA and mustard vinaigrette.

And take note of the summer watermelon with salty feta cheese recipe.

Chapter 2 pays homage to heroic eggplants and cauliflowers (are you aware of the whole roasted cauliflower craze in Israel and on Manhattan's West 72nd Street?), and begins with a cauliflower salad that includes a peanut tahini sauce and sliced bamba snacks. A sampling of recipes include ones for grilled cauliflower steaks; sweet and sour baked (fried then baked) eggplant a la Einat's mother; and Sabich.

In Chapter 3, Tahini and Chickpeas (and Hummus), with eight tahini recipes, including honey-soy tahini sauce, and a tahini banana date shake.

Chapter 5 is focused on dairy and breakfast, and the cheese that has been coveted in Israel back to the time of the Knights Templar. Recipes includes ones for homemade Labneh; marinated Labneh balls; Shakshuka (3 types); Balkan-style scrambled eggs; and Egg Salad with Preserved Lemon, Caramelized Onions and Zucchini. Chapter 6 on Chicken explains how you can master Israeli Schnitzel, and includes recipes for an Orange Blossom-scented Roast Chicken; Ethiopian Doro Wot; chicken LIVER schnitzel; and Musahan on Flatbread a la chef Nof Atamna-Ismaeel.

In Chapter 7, which is All About Rice, there is a recipe for Persian bottom of the pot Tahdig Rice; Tbit (Iraqi chicken with rice); Chicken Maqloubeh (Upside down; Palestinian jasmine rice, eggplant, cauliflower, vegetables and chicken pilaf); Bakhsh; and Ghormeh Sabzi. Chapter 8 is dedicated to Ktzitzot (minced ones, chopped ones) which they wrote are the “epitome of Israeli home cooking: inexpensive and designed to stretch a bit a protein to feed a family.” Some of their faves are Beet (and russet potato) Latkes with preserved lemon and yogurt dressing; Chicken Patties with chard, leeks and celery in lemony broth; Persian Beef and Duck Meatballs (Fassenjan); Persian Meatballs stuffed with prunes (Gondy Berenji); and Ktzitzot Abu Hatzerah.

The title for Chapter 9: Soups that Comfort and Refresh sounds poetic to me. Their southern French inspired chicken soup with knaidlach uses saffron, fennel and tarragon. The lentil with carrot soup is thick with cumin, turmeric, coriander and garlic. The Yemenite White Bean Soup is seasoned with Hawaij, tomato paste, beef bones and cilantro. Their Kubbeh soup uses a beet based broth, and the tomato, strawberry and arak gazpacho refreshes and is based on a recipe from chef Guy Zarfati.

Chapter 10 shares recipes for “Deliciously Stuffed” Seer Memulayim, where the authors stuff onions, cabbage cake, peppers, beets, delicata squash... with lamb, freekah, prunes, quinoa, lemon, silan sauce, spiced beef, pomegranate, dried mint sauce, raisins, and more. Chapter 11 is focused on couscous, which in some Israeli households is traditionally eaten twice a week: on Shabbat, and for Tuesday lunch; and its fixings, including Mafroum, Lamb Tagine, Matboucha, Mesayer, and short ribs.

Al-Ha'esh (on fire) and Mangal (Arabic for “a grill”, cookout) foods are the focus of Chapter 12. Recipes include ones for whole grilled fish with za'atar; grouper kebabs with chermoula; grilled chicken wings that are shawarma spiced; and Arayes, which are grilled meat-stuffed pitas. Chapter 13's breads include a challah stuffed with mushroom, leeks, and za'atar; pita bread; laffa; lahmajun topped with beef; phyllo bourekas; Yemenite semolina and flour pancakes (Lachuch); spinach and pine ut fattayers; Jerusalem “bagels” stuffed with feta and scallions; and kubenah stuffed with caramelized onions.

Among the happy treats in Chapter 14: Sweet Endings are recipes for a Fresh Orange Pound Cake; lazy easy baklava; Israeli cheesecake with pistachios and labneh; and chocolate Kadurey biscuits balls.

BTAY AVON
17 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

An amazing cookbook and tour of Israel's food markets (shuks) all rolled into one!

I cooked our entire Rosh Hashanah meal out of this book and everything was delicious. The chicken with olives and citrus is going to go into regular rotation in our house, as is the chopped salad with kohlorabi and avocado. I also loved the three tomato salad that is on the cover of the book. This book provides a tour of ALL of israel's important food markets. We have been to Shuk Hacarmel in Tel Aviv, but I will use this book on our next trip to Israel as a guide to visit all of the other markets that have such mouthwatering food. This is a history book, a cookbook, and a cultural tour book all rolled into one. Thank you Einat and Janna for putting this together!
13 people found this helpful
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Christmas Gift

I just received this book as a Christmas 🎄 Gift. I love Israeli cuisine, so I was very excited to receive this book. I made 2 recipes last night: the hummus and the short ribs with Swiss chard and beans. The flavors for each of the recipes were amazing, but some of the quantities of the ingredients were off. The hummus was not as creamy as my recipe and I thought there were too many beans in the short rib recipe ( 2 cups dry expanded significantly ) . I will definitely continue to try other recipes and the short rib recipe as well as the spices were outstanding.
10 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Lovely pictures and delicious recipes

This book is full of innovative and delicious recipes. Many of the recipes are vegetarian which is nice as I often find myself hosting Vegetarians. I've made several dishes already and they all were delicious.
10 people found this helpful
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Wow wow wow

Wow!!! Very impressed and excited just flipping through all these new recipes. . So much variety between Israeli, yemenite and Persian inspired foods . i never ever thought there would be a cookbook better than Her first book Balaboosta (which is literally my bible). But Shuk is literally so exciting and filled with TONS of new and creative recipes to shake things up at home and make my husband excited . So many beautiful recipes and desserts. Also super impressed with Einat’s homemade spice blends.

I truly recommend .
9 people found this helpful
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Beautiful cookbook

The photography in this cookbook is stunning and each dish speaks to the beauty and diversity of Israel and its heritage. Einat Admony and Janna Gur make each recipe approachable with tips for sourcing ingredients that are less familiar in typical American kitchens. I felt transported to Israel while reading about the authors' favorite shuks and about the context of the amazing dishes you can find in Israel. Highly recommend this cookbook!
6 people found this helpful
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My favorite cook book

This book brought tears to my eyes - it’s the recipes that evoke most precious memories- delicious, unpretentious food - simple preparation, beautiful pictures. Einat Admoni, just in case you are reading reviewers, you are the best chef ever and I hope your restaurant thrives. I bought several copies of this book to give as gifts to my friends.
5 people found this helpful
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Best cookbook ever!

I love cookbooks with beautiful pictures, not-too-hard recipes, new flavors that actually excite my palette (not just shock or scare it... think weird cooking shows), and weave a bit of interesting cultural interest into the descriptions or instructions. This book fed my soul as well as my body and has inspired at least three additional dinner parties featuring the recipes... and so spreads the love!
4 people found this helpful
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Beautiful photographs, wonderful descriptions and great recipes!

I love trying new foods and decided to make the Iraqi Tbit and a simple chopped salad. It was a fun, delicious and simple meal that added new flavors to my table.
2 people found this helpful