Your worldwide guide to great hummus. A community sharing blog to discover the best Hummus around the globe. Please don't hesitate to contact us: contact@hummusguide.com
Wednesday, April 29, 2009
Germany: Berlin, Dusseldorf, Hamburg, Koln, Munich
Germany is a large territory and we're just starting with Hummus places. We'd love to hear from all of you to update this list. We got recommendations for this group of Hummus restaurants from a friend, but we'd love to hear your thoughts on these restaurants if they deserve to stay on our list of our Best Hummus in Germany.
DUSSELDORF
Sahara
Has a shisha lounge and live music.
Hüttenstr. 1
40215 Düsseldorf, Germany
0211 2095214
MUNICH
Sababa, Altstadt
Westenriederstrasse 9, 80331 München
+49 89 23237881
www.sababa-munich.com
Sababa is still up in the air as to it's Hummus. It's a middle eastern place that based on it's name in Hebrew means cool/hip/relaxed/not formal ...
(It's a slang word)
The name seems to cater to Israeli tourists and to a Jewish audience that knows the meaning of the word.
Some websites have recommended their food, but we couldn't decide yet about their Hummus.
Koln
Al Salam
http://www.alsalam.de/
Hohenstaufenring 22
50674 Köln, Germany
+49 221 216713
BERLIN
Maroush
http://www.maroush-berlin.de/
Adalbertstraße 93
10999 Kreuzberg, Berlin, Germany
+49 69 536171
HAMBURG
Mazza
This restaurant is very classy and elegant. It's on the upscale and not cheap. It's a high end middle eastern restaurant which is rather unique as usually middle eastern restaurants are on the cheap side. But it's very elegant for a middle eastern place and we'd love to hear additional thoughts on their hummus- to know if the high class of the place has elevated it to new heights or has overlooked the bassis of this cuisine?
Their info:
http://www.mazza-hamburg.de/
Moorkamp 5, 20357 Hamburg
+49 40 2841917 70
Wednesday, April 1, 2009
USA New York: Article from NY TIMES
My friend Amy, just made me aware that the NY TIMES ran an article today about Hummus joints in NYC. I included it also in the NY section, but for those following this blog I thought to share it in real time as it's so cool that Hummus is starting to catch on in the US.
Dipping Into an Israeli Trend
o
Article Tools Sponsored By
By LIGAYA MISHAN
Published: April 1, 2009
IN Israel, hummus parlors spark the kind of furious debate reserved for barbecue joints in this country. Pilgrimages are made to track down the best chickpea purée, and recipes are closely guarded secrets.
Hummusiot, as these eateries are called, have of late begun sprouting in New York.
HUMMUS PLACE
109 St. Marks Place (First Avenue), East Village, and other locations; (212) 529-9198 or go to hummusplace.com.
The signature dish is eerily smooth, almost whipped in texture. It comes dusted in paprika, with olive oil pooling in the center. The taste is seamless, the sesame and the garlic in a state of equilibrium.
A ladling of whole chickpeas ($5.95) brings snap, while layers of fava-bean stew, white tahini, and hard-boiled egg ($5.95) give it depth and sensuousness.
Opened in 2004, Hummus Place was a pioneer among New York’s hummusiot. It’s now a mini-empire, with a fourth outpost coming soon. But its original location, on St. Marks Place, still has a cozy neighborhood feel, decked out in warm yellow and burgundy, with polished crockery on the walls. The menu, once confined to three iterations of hummus, has grown. But the newer offerings — such as unctuous stuffed grape leaves ($3.50) and cakey falafel ($3.50) — are an unremarkable sideshow.
NANOOSH
2012 Broadway (69th Street), Upper West Side, and another location; (212) 362-7922 or nanoosh.com.
Nanoosh bills itself as a “Mediterranean Hummus Bar.” It touts its organic ingredients, but has the prefab look of a franchise, with lots of blond wood and a giant blowup of a mint sprig.
Above a communal table hang light fixtures made of acrylic panels filled with dried chickpeas. Oddly, however, chickpeas are not among the many hummus toppings available, which include sun-dried tomato pesto and grilled chicken breast.
The namesake Hummus Nanoosh ($12.50), with ground beef, gets swamped by limp mushrooms and onions. Unadorned ($6.50), the hummus is appropriately thick and creamy, but could benefit from a sprinkling of pine nuts ($1.50).
HUMMUS KITCHEN
768 Ninth Avenue (51st Street) and another location; (212) 333-3009 or hummuskitchen.com.
Hummus Kitchen aspires to a lounge-y vibe, with an aesthetic that might be described as Levantine modern: brushed concrete, wood floors inlaid with mosaic tile, wrought-iron globe lamps hung from the ceiling.
The hummus has pleasing body and a pronounced nuttiness, whether paired with chickpeas, fava beans, juicy eggplant or wild mushrooms ($6.95 each; $8.50 for a sampler).
Nearly all the appetizers are in the mixed platter ($8.50). The worthiest are the falafel — surprisingly light, with the thinnest veneer of crust — and the bureka, a flaky pastry bulging with feta, eggplant and sun-dried tomato.
The lemonana ($3.50), fresh lemonade poured over a sprightly mint slush, injects a shivery tang into the garlicky palette of the meal. The drink is practically a side dish.
MIMI’S HUMMUS
1209 Cortelyou Road (Westminster Road), Ditmas Park, Brooklyn, (718) 284-4444.
The newest of these hummusiot also happens to be the best.
Mimi’s Hummus opened in February on Cortelyou Road, the Restaurant Row of Ditmas Park.
The tiny square shopfront is sunny and airy, with only eight tables. Perforated wood planks, swooping up to the ceiling, are a clever update of Middle Eastern latticework.
The owner, Mimi Kitani, is Israeli, but her mother grew up in Morocco and her father in the Kurdish region of Iraq. Culinary traces from each country surface in her well-edited selection of small plates.
The menu notes “All dishes are homemade,” and that’s evident in the vibrancy of the flavors. Ms. Kitani’s aunt grinds the za’atar spice mix by hand in Israel. Crimson-stained turnips are fished out of a pickling jar brimming with garlic cloves.
The velvety hummus takes five forms ($8 to $9). In one version, bright with lemon, it serves as a bed for whole chickpeas that have the bite of beans properly soaked overnight. In another, the same hummus base turns earthy and fragrant when finished with cinnamon-laced ground beef and pine nuts.
As a complement, the stuffed grape leaves ($6) are moist but sturdy, collapsing only once in the mouth. Cauliflower, not the sexiest of vegetables, gets a swagger from a bold toss of parsley and tahini ($5). It nearly upstages the hummus, and could inspire a following of its own.
http://events.nytimes.com/2009/04/01/dining/reviews/01unde.html?ref=dining
EU: HUNGARY: BUDAPEST
Taken from the NYTIMES:
Hummus Bar
Address VII. Kertesz u.39, Budapest
Phone 1/321-7477
Cuisine Vegetarian
Price Menu items 200 Ft-1,000 Ft ($1.10-$5.40/60p-£2.85)
Reader Rating
(0 stars, 0 votes)
Rate This
Log In to Rate This Venue | Register Now
Hummus Bar
Work:
VII. Kertesz u.39
Budapest, ,
1/321-7477
47.50219119.065161
Frommer's Review
This is the most popular hummus and falafel bar in the city. You can eat in, seating is upstairs, or you can take it with you. Either way, the food is delicious and very inexpensive. Several varieties of hummus and salads are offered to go with the falafel. While you are waiting, don't be surprised if you are offered some tea or samples of other items. All of the limited choices are made fresh.
http://travel.nytimes.com/travel/guides/europe/hungary/budapest/70911/hummus-bar/restaurant-detail.html
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)