![Silvena Rowe - Can she shake up Dubai's Middle Eastern cuisine? Silvena Rowe - Can she shake up Dubai's Middle Eastern cuisine?](https://m5.paperblog.com/i/48/485080/silvena-rowe-can-she-shake-up-dubais-middle-e-L-18Vg0b.jpeg)
Before Silvena Rowe came to Dubai, she had believed it to be vulgar - a place of no substance. Why even bother? But since a pivotal return to her roots after the death of her food-loving father from Turkey, her connection to its cuisine has intensified. After food safaris and some self-teaching in Turkey and Syria, the writing of a book (Purple Citrus and Sweet Perfume - with foreword by Heston Blumenthal) that details her findings, and the opening of Quince (modern, Ottoman inspired cuisine in Mayfair), she has realised that a move to the Middle East is vital to her progression. It would not be Damascus, her 'favourite city in the world', it needed to be stable, modern, livable, and essentially ready for her cuisine. Dubai called her, and dreading it, she arrived for the first time some months back. She stayed at Al Maha, avoiding the glitz of the city, saying to herself that she could just stay there. But business brought her out into our forest of tall towers eventually - and what did she find? It surprised her, smacked her in the face with its sophistication and style. There was more to Dubai than she had thought. This just might work.
![Silvena Rowe - Can she shake up Dubai's Middle Eastern cuisine? Silvena Rowe - Can she shake up Dubai's Middle Eastern cuisine?](https://m5.paperblog.com/i/48/485080/silvena-rowe-can-she-shake-up-dubais-middle-e-L-sIbpWf.jpeg)
![Silvena Rowe - Can she shake up Dubai's Middle Eastern cuisine? Silvena Rowe - Can she shake up Dubai's Middle Eastern cuisine?](https://m5.paperblog.com/i/48/485080/silvena-rowe-can-she-shake-up-dubais-middle-e-L-2YY9cI.jpeg)
Middle Eastern restaurants in Dubai all serve the same dishes - moutabel, tabouleh, kofta, shawarma, baklava and rich, fragrant rice dishes like maglouba and biryani. Sometimes that's a good thing. Rowe herself admits to a love of moutabel that borders on fetish. It's consistent. You know what you are getting. It makes it easy to measure the standard of the food - if they can't make a decent fattoush, then it's not a great restaurant. Like other world-wide stalwarts - things like Champagne, pizza, pho, Thai green curry - many MENA (Middle East North Africa) tastes that are more than something you put in your mouth - a brand, almost, that guarantees the same thing every time. But how boring would Champagne become if that's all you ever got to drink? And imagine how less crisp and clean it would be without modern techniques in the winery... This is the equivalent of what we've got happening here in Dubai with regional cuisine. The same old recipes - things that have not changed since the fall of the Ottoman empire. And as much as I know they're onto a good thing, I've pretty much had cardboard-flavoured humous up to the eyeballs, and I doubt I'm the only one.
![Silvena Rowe - Can she shake up Dubai's Middle Eastern cuisine? Silvena Rowe - Can she shake up Dubai's Middle Eastern cuisine?](https://m5.paperblog.com/i/48/485080/silvena-rowe-can-she-shake-up-dubais-middle-e-L-ar1N9B.jpeg)
![Silvena Rowe - Can she shake up Dubai's Middle Eastern cuisine? Silvena Rowe - Can she shake up Dubai's Middle Eastern cuisine?](https://m5.paperblog.com/i/48/485080/silvena-rowe-can-she-shake-up-dubais-middle-e-L-w_E2DM.jpeg)
As a contrast, Rowe offers recipes that embrace tradition and modernity simultaneously. I can see an affinity with colour, aromatics and texture. Her fervent nature has convinced me to buy her book (130AED at Kinokinuya). Expect dishes like beetroot moutabel with tahini and toasted orange peel, wild greens and feta borek, kadafai schnitzel with pomegranate sauce, cumin and sumac-crusted barramundi with avocado hummus, pumpkin and za'atar hummus, yoghurt pannacotta with apricot mousse, pink peppercorn and cardamom meringues with mulberries and white chocolate. I seriously cannot wait until she arrives.
![Silvena Rowe - Can she shake up Dubai's Middle Eastern cuisine? Silvena Rowe - Can she shake up Dubai's Middle Eastern cuisine?](https://m5.paperblog.com/i/48/485080/silvena-rowe-can-she-shake-up-dubais-middle-e-L-yZCWK5.jpeg)
Silvena Rowe has registered the name 'Ottoman Cafe', which she hopes to open in Dubai before the end of this year. She also has high hopes of a retail offering similar to Carluccios or Dean and Deluca. Her plans are to live here - her first time as a resident in the Middle East, at least for 3 weeks out of every month (Ottoman Cafe will also open in London over coming months). She also has plans for bringing back the Levantine breakfast with a bang, so don't just expect something fine dining and inapproachable - she wants something for everyone.
If you would like to see Silvena Rowe in action, you can catch a glimpse on BBC2 here, or have a look at this manic montage
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Until she does arrive, there are a few fine dining Middle Eastern restaurants in Dubai that are worth a look at, although at this stage none really break out of the square. Great restaurants, even if their chefs (or concept providers) could possibly be accused of having a lack of imagination.
- Ottomans five-star Turkish at Grosvenor House, Time Out Dubai Award winner 2013
- Lalezar Sumptuous venue serving Turkish cuisine at Zabeel Saray
- Leventine Fun atmosphere on the terrace at Atlantis, the Palm
- Al Nafoorah Home-cooking style Lebanese option at both Emirates Towers and Zabeel Saray (second possibly the better option)
- Amaseena Ritz Carlton on the beach, a beautiful, tented village feel.
![Silvena Rowe - Can she shake up Dubai's Middle Eastern cuisine? Silvena Rowe - Can she shake up Dubai's Middle Eastern cuisine?](https://m5.paperblog.com/i/48/485080/silvena-rowe-can-she-shake-up-dubais-middle-e-L-uVmiwb.jpeg)
![Silvena Rowe - Can she shake up Dubai's Middle Eastern cuisine? Silvena Rowe - Can she shake up Dubai's Middle Eastern cuisine?](https://m5.paperblog.com/i/48/485080/silvena-rowe-can-she-shake-up-dubais-middle-e-L-boNyHR.jpeg)
- Tagine at the One and Only. Traditional (and very rich) Moroccan food in an incredibly romantic setting or
- Marrakach, which has a reputation for being one of the most underrated restaurants in the city by those in the know.
Abu Dhabi gets a little closer to modern Middle Eastern nosh with restaurants like award winning Li Berut, which offers Lebanese fusion at Etihad Towers. Another recent addition is Ornina, which offers dishes with more of a southern Mediterranean and North African vibe, which tends to be fused with expensive ingredients from Western Europe. Fabulous pod-style venue, but as yet receiving very mixed reviews.
I'd appreciate any other recommendations, and if anyone has an update on Greg Malouf's recent sniffing out of the city, I'd like to know about that too - there were rumours, but the trail seems to have gone cold...