Israeli cuisine
Reim Bistro: Friends for a Kosher dinner - restaurant review
Pizza and pasta are on the border of Bnei Brak and Tel Aviv, along with some very enticing fish dishes, salads, and homemade versions of popular spreads such as tehina.
In the kitchen with Henny: Cheesy does it
Purete: A laid-back chef restaurant near Lake Kinneret - restaurant review
Fedrik: Modi'in's upscale restaurant becomes kosher - restaurant review
Hyper-focused restaurants are the latest Tel Aviv food trend
Avocado hysteria has officially hit the White City
PASCALE'S KITCHEN: The benefits of cooking with herbs
In Israel many people have begun to understand the benefits of adding fresh herbs to make dishes tastier.
Presentation par excellence
This summer, in its ongoing quest to continuously reinvent itself, SegevArt held yet another grand re-opening, with a completely redesigned interior – and a revised menu, to boot.
Israeli Chef Michael Solomonov wins James Beard award
The road was not easy. On the way, he discovered that cooking Israeli food in America might be seen as a politically charged act.
PASCALE'S KITCHEN: Delicious dairy desserts
Shavuot is one of my favorite holidays, and I absolutely love preparing dairy delights for my family and friends. Everything is clean, and both the table and the guests are adorned in white.
A popular Netanya kosher restaurant with an extensive dairy menu
Hayekev is noted for wonderful view, and don’t miss the refurbished bathrooms.
PASCALE'S KITCHEN: Easy vegetable dishes
So, if you had a sous-chef that would prep all the vegetables ahead of time for you, would you still not prepare easy, tasty vegetable dishes?
Pascale’s Kitchen: Passover leftovers repurposed
This week I’ve chosen to linger with the wonderful holiday feelings and at the same time use up all the leftover matzah in my pantry, before completely returning to the world of hametz.
A Tel Aviv restaurant: Wine, food and art
Deca in Tel-Aviv is a well-established fish restaurant that we have visited several times, so an invitation to an evening of food and wine to herald innovations to its menu was impossible to resist.
Changing the world, one meal at a time
Admoni is clear in saying that healthy cooking and eating can be fun and delicious. “I don’t want to teach children that health cooking is always salad or rice or quinoa. No, no, no,” she said.