From the AFP:
“Dubai gets
ready to go kosher after Israel peace deal”
(Rabbi Yaakov
Eisenstein, right, supervises the preparation of food at Elli's Kosher Kitchen,
set up two years ago to enable Jewish travellers to remain observant while
visiting the UAE.)
At the plush
Armani hotel in the shadow of the Burj Khalifa, the world's tallest tower, a
rabbi switches on the stoves at what is billed as Dubai's first kosher
restaurant. With the ink still fresh on the United Arab Emirates' landmark
normalisation accord with Israel, restaurants and caterers are rushing to
prepare for what they hope will be a flood of Jewish visitors arriving on new
direct flights. The city-state welcomed more than 16 million visitors in 2019
and expected to reach a record 20 million this year, although that was before
the coronavirus hit. It reopened its doors to tourists again in July after a
painful four-month shutdown, but business is slow.
Under the
normalisation deal, the Emirates and Israel will establish air links -- likely
to begin in January -- and a visa regime that will allow residents to travel
for business and pleasure. But before then, businesses hoping to cash in on the
new market must overcome challenges including building kosher kitchens,
training staff and sourcing appropriate foodstuffs. "We have been training
our staff for months," said Fabien Fayolle, the chef at the upscale
40-seat Armani/Kaf, one of a cluster of restaurants in the luxury hotel. "In
this kitchen we teach them what they can use and what they can't do." "The
idea for us to open this restaurant is to be able to provide a five-star
experience to Jewish people or anyone who wants to try kosher food. It didn't
make any sense to make 'home cooked' food. We wanted to give more of an
experience," he told AFP. Until local suppliers begin servicing the new
market in the UAE though, "our main challenge will be obtaining the
ingredients," he said of the lavishly priced international menu which
includes items adapted to make them compatible with kosher rules.
- Hi-tech
kosher - As well as requiring a Jewish person to switch on the cooking
stoves and supervise a restaurant kitchen, the rules governing kosher food
prohibit consumption of meat from certain animals and sea creatures, as well as
the mixing of meat and dairy products. Much like halal rules for
Muslims, animals must be slaughtered in a prescribed way. Rabbi Levi
Duchman, who certified the Armani/Kaf, said he has received requests from
"dozens of restaurants in the Emirates that want to offer kosher
dishes". At the Dubai restaurant, the stoves can be turned on by a
rabbi remotely using a mobile application, and the cooking monitored by
cameras. Duchman said the halal tradition, which governs the Muslim diet
and shares rules with the kosher approach, including a ban on eating pork, made
it "easier to explain the rules of kosher in the Emirates".
- Long way
to go - Elli Kriel is the pioneer of kosher cuisine in the Emirates, after
moving to Dubai eight years ago from South Africa and realising she needed to
find kosher products for her home kitchen. She has been running Elli's
Kosher Kitchen for the past two years, born out of the need for Jewish
travellers to remain observant while in the UAE. Her business got
underway in November 2018 when she was asked to provide meals for rabbis
attending an interfaith meeting in the capital Abu Dhabi. "From
there, word spread and I started getting more and more requests," she
said. "The challenge of running a kosher kitchen in the UAE is
that.. there is high demand" following the normalisation agreement.
"But the industry is not really set up for that -- it is really hard to
get a lot of products, especially the meats and the cheeses," she said.
However, import channels are now being established, Kriel added. "And
in terms of actually opening a kitchen, you can open one but then you need to
have a rabbi with you and there aren't many here, so we had to bring one in for
this specific task," she said of the rabbi who supervises her kitchen
full-time.
While the speed
of the rapprochement between the two countries caught everyone by surprise,
entrepreneurs have been quick to start filling the space. Just two days
after the signing of the accord in Washington, Dubai-based Emirates Airlines
unveiled plans to produce kosher meals in collaboration with a company owned by
Ross Kriel -- Elli's husband who is one of the leaders of the Jewish community
in the UAE. The Middle East's largest airline previously used suppliers
in Thailand for kosher meals on its international flights. From the new
year it will produce them at a dedicated facility in the UAE, expected to be
operating in time for the inauguration of direct flights.
^ It so nice to
see the UAE and its people work to provide Kosher food for both Israelis and
Jews. ^
https://www.yahoo.com/news/dubai-gets-ready-kosher-israel-032655546.html
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