Showing posts with label BGU. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BGU. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

Israel! Ben Gurion University of the Negev & Beersheva!

Israel Railways
Beersheva or bust!
I fell in love with the Negev Desert in Israel Many years ago… I love the climate- especially that of the Dead Sea, as it heals both my psoriasis and the rheumatoid arthritis of friends- and I find the desert extremely beautiful, as the light constantly changes the colors of the earth and the mountains, making it a landscape- painter’s dream. (I painted several landscapes of the Negev incorporating the many-colored desert earths into my paints...) The Negev’s wide-open spaces and pitch-dark night skies peppered with a thousand stars always felt like a place of a million opportunities and romantic adventures to me, and for years I tried to find a job in Beersheva so I could move there. At that time (in the 1980s), as an illustrator, jobs in my field were non-existent, and so I remained in Jerusalem, the city of my heart… But I spent as much time as I could in the Negev, and during my IDF service I spent one glorious moth there which I remember to this day...  Because of my love for, and interest in, the Negev, Dan’s winning us tickets to Israel from the American Association of Ben Gurion University of the Negev was especially wonderful, as BGU set up a fascinating day for us at two of their campuses, and we got to meet with both professors and students, and learn about this amazing institution. It also gave us the opportunity to spend a week exploring more of the Negev than I ever had before (deets in my next post!), and for me to share with Dan some of the magic of this amazing desert that houses world-class wineries, gourmet farms, ancient sites, unique geological wonders, healing spas, and state-of-the-art scientific research!

Ben Gurion University of the Negev recently celebrated its 40th anniversary, and the changes to both the University and Beersheva in this short space of time have been profound. Much as I love the Negev, Beersheva was still a “poky” little desert town when I lived in Jerusalem and was in the Israeli Army in the 1980s, but it’s now Truly a boomtown, thanks, in large measure, to BGU, with its 5 faculties and a student body of 20,000 deeply involved with the communities in which they live- quite a bit different from the first graduating class of 23!
Elisse, on the Israel Railways train to Beersheva


The Negev in all its glory...
Dan & I took the super-modern Israel Railways train from Tel Aviv to Beersheva (SUCH a difference from the trains I knew "back in the day" ca. 1985, when the Tel Aviv-Jerusalem-Haifa-only train was famous solely for being so slow you could get out and pick flowers and jump back on!), and were in the “The Big B” in 90 minutes flat! We took a cab to get our rental car, which was a Totally hilarious experience, with the cab driver yelling at his wife on his cell phone headset ("You didn't believe me when I told you that repair guy was a crook!") & gesturing to her with both hands while driving hell-bent-for-leather through Beersheva, as if she were in the car with us!!! It was So hard not to laugh or say something sarcastic, but neither Dan nor I wanted to interfere with his Amazing multitasking ability, & I was having WAY too much fun eavesdropping on his conversation! We picked up our rental car (and the less said about that the better, except do NOT, under ANY circumstances, EVER use Shlomo/Sixt/Auto Europe!), and drove to Ben Gurion University’s Marcus Family Campus near Sde Boker. Kibbutz Sde Boker was the home, and is the final resting place, of Israel’s first Prime Minister, David Ben Gurion, BGU’s namesake and inspiration, who firmly believed that Israel’s future success lay largely in the Negev; Sde Boker itself is truly a garden and oasis in the desert. We had the honor of meeting Professor Pedro Berliner, PhD, Director of the Jacob Blaustein Institutes for Desert Research (BIDR), and, guided by Cochy Abuharon, to see some of the amazing research and developments that Ben Gurion University continues to do to make the world’s desert bloom- not just Israel’s. For over 30 years the Jacob Blaustein Institutes for Desert Research have been at the forefront of cutting-edge research and development helping to solve the critical food production, water purification & desalination, brackish water, desertification, and sustainable living issues of people living in the drylands- which make up 40% of the world’s landmass! We were able to see one of BGU’s solar projects, a working solution to reuse “grey water” (which I wish we had here in West Virginia, hint, hint...), their totally "green" buildings, and the fabulous “$40,000 algae” that is taking the pharmaceutical industry by storm! BGU and a Thailand company have signed a research and development agreement to commercially develop BGU’s proprietary green algae strain, harvesting valuable bio-chemicals from this microalgae and utilizing it for biofuels, and possible cosmetic and pharmaceutical uses (as it’s powerful antioxidant), for such illnesses as eczema, psoriasis, asthma, arthritis, blood pressure, cholesterol, chronic inflammation, Alzheimer’s, macular degeneration, and heart attacks. Amazing stuff! Being 52 (and thus being Seriously into anti-aging products! LOL), as well as suffering from Psoriasis, the potential of this algae fascinates the dickens out of me & I’m determined to learn more! If you’re as interested as I, check out: http://www.aabgu.org/media-center/news-releases/commercial-algae.html
We were able to visit projcets of BIDR’s three Institutes in the Negev (the Zuckerberg Institute for Water Research, French Associates Institute for Agricultural and Biotechnology of Drylands, and the Institute for Dryland Environmental Research), which comprise a true international “think tank” of professors and students from around the world, living proof that in the "perfect world" of academia, at least, science and creativity have no borders or “agendas” beyond the altruistic. I believe that the finest thing about BGU’s R&D is that it isn’t academic research for research’s sake: BGU creates and implements real-world solutions. BGU truly binds academia with industry, as well as Israel with the developing world- which is its aim. Some of the many countries involved with and benefiting from Ben Gurion University’s research programs include Turkmenistan, India, Ghana, and Jordan.

Prof. Pedro Berliner, PhD & Elisse

Dan & BGU's Cochy Abuharon, at the BGU Solar Energy Center

Cochy Abuharon w/ BGU's "grey water" recycling model

To give one splendid example of “real world” usage of BGU’s research: Prof. David Faiman, one of the world's leading authorities on solar energy (and chair of BGU's Department of Solar Energy and Environmental Physics), is leading a team to make solar energy efficient & affordable to collect and store; his team produced photovoltaic cells that can concentrate and magnify the sun's energy up to 500 times over- and an Israeli kibbutz has been fueling its power needs with this amazing technology for over a year! The Albert Katz International School for Desert Studies at BIDR has both Masters and PhD programs in English, and is attended by students from more than 30 countries! For more information email: dschool@bgu.ac.il  
Community outreach and true integration with the people of the Negev is a cornerstone of BGU’s raison d’etre, and through dozens of different programs, such as the Perach ”big brother/big sister” mentoring program, and the Community Action Unit, BGU’s students and faculty give back to the communities around them, serving a variety of peoples including immigrants from Ethiopia, Negev Bedouin, and the elderly. Dan and I had lunch in the university’s Beersheva Campus Cafeteria with Dana Malka and several BGU students, all of whom were working with residents of disadvantaged communities, and they truly impressed us with their intelligence, idealism, and passion.
Our last meeting was with Professor Steve Rosen, of the Dept. of Bible, Archaeology and Ancient Near East Studies, and he graciously took the time to “schmooz” with us about his involvement in many of the remarkable archaeological digs throughout Israel. It was a true treat to sit and chat with someone who has excavated some of the most historic archaeoligical sites in the world! At the end of our meeting I had to ask him which site he’d recommend to “tourists” like us who had limited time with which to explore the Negev. (In Israel you are “spoiled for choice” as far as archaeology goes- there are literally 100s of amazing sites that go back thousands of years nearly everywhere you turn. The Real problem is picking which sites to visit & explore in depth!) His answer was immediate: Avdat! Avdat is a Nabatean city in the Negev highlands founded in the 1st Century BCE as a road station for their caravans; there are Roman and Byzantine ruins there, as well. Since I had never had the chance to go there and we’d already heard wonderful things about it from several friends, including Ben Brewer of the wonderful Israel Food Tours, we decided then and there that we’d definitely go and explore it! Avdat is one of many Israeli UNESCO World Heritage Sites; one of the Desert Cities of the Negev on the 1500 mile-long frankincense Incense Route from Arabia to the Mediterranean.

Dan & Cochy Abuharon with the Fabulous Algae!

My only regrets at the end of this fabulous day were:
1. That we didn’t have longer to explore all that the University has to offer and meet more of her professors and students; and
2: That I wasn’t still in academia! Our day at BGU made me want to live in the Negev more than ever, and to be a part of the amazing things that are being created in this glorious place... Must. Win. Lotto…

Elisse & the Fabulous Algae!

BGU Sustainable Eco-System Project


The Negev...


An "old soldier" with the the gorgeous new guys of the IDF
at Ben Gurion University of the Negev

The Negev, in all its spendor...

Dan & Elisse with BGU students


















After our day at Ben Gurion University, the university graciously put us up at Leonardo Hotel Negev in Beersheva, a world-class hotel in the center of town, where we had a wonderful view of “Boomtown Beersheva” from our window!

Beersheva view from our Leonardo Hotel room...

At the Smilansky Tapas Wine Bar, Beersheva...

Dinner at Yakota, with our Tagine...

Chef Dan & the Chef-Owner of Yakota!

Beersheva at night- from our hotel room window...

























I had a(nother) glass of great Israeli wine and Dan his Gin and Tonic at the lovely Smilanski Tapas Wine Bar  (You can "like" them on Facebook:
http://www.facebook.com/smilanski?sk=app_7146470109#!/smilanski?sk=wall) in Beersheva’s pink-stone “old town” (where we Must return to have a tapas dinner!), and then a truly gourmet French-Moroccan dinner at Yakota. Chef Dan got to “schmooze” the delightful chef-owner after our glorious dinner of Moroccan pastels and “cigarim” appetizers, deliciously seasoned lamb chops on a potato puree and a spicy, fruity lamb tagine served in the beautiful traditional conical-lidded pot, with cous-cous, paired with a great Israeli wine, and ending with a selection of delectable Moroccan sweets & French petit fours, all served in an elegant, sexy setting! This fabulous little restaurant has been thriving for 40 years, but we only discovered it thanks to BGU! We came back to the Leonardo Hotel to learn that a Sheikh had attended a meeting at our hotel that evening (!), and Dan got to chat with a student of BGU’s Hospitality Dept. working at the hotel. In the morning, after a great Israeli breakfast of Cafe Hafouch ("upside down coffee", a.k.a. cappuchino!), salads, fruit, my fave cracked Sura olives, and other yummy things from the breakfast buffet, we drove to see Abraham's Well. This is the traditional site of the well (Be'er - hence Beersheva) that Abraham bought from Avimelech as cited in Genesis: "That it may be a witness unto me, that I have digged this well. Wherefore that place was called Beersheva ". Its entrance is via the gas station next door(!), & it was closed when we got there, but having actually & finally found it, we climbed up and peered in over the wall!

Israel-Turkish Memorial,. Beersheva

Israel-Turkish Memorial, Beersheva


1915 Turkish Train Station & Manager's House, Beersheva


Abraham's Well, Beersheva








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Then we drove 'round & around and finally found the historic WWI Turkish-Israel Monument and  (die-hard railfans that we are) the 1915 Turkish Train Station and Manager's House, which is in the midst of a new high-rise housing development in the center of Beersheva and (happily) seems to be in the process of restoration. And then we hit the road for the Dead Sea!
Dan, Tel Aviv Israel Railways Station











Next: More Negev explorations! The Dead Sea & mud, Massada, wineries and gourmet farms, crocodiles, drinking Negev wine in a 2000 year old wine cellar in Avdat, & driving across the Ramon Crater, Israel’s answer to the Grand Canyon! 

Saturday, May 28, 2011

Israel! Thanks to Ben Gurion University of the Negev! Part 1: Tel Aviv!

Dan and I recently returned from a totally wonderful month in Israel, a dream made possible by Dan winning us tickets from American Associates of Ben Gurion University of the Negev! The friend who sent us the sweepstakes email once owned the bar in Jerusalem where I tended bar while I was in the Israeli Army (1984-1986), and he is firmly convinced there are no "coincidences" or "accidents" in this life, and that this was "b'shert"- meant to be. And I now think he's right! Last April, while I was working a FEMA disaster response operation, Dan called to tell me he'd won us tickets to Israel, and I nearly went out of my mind! Dancing around the office, yipping and yelping, my co-workers thought I'd lost my mind- and in a sense, I had! For 15 years I'd dreamt, hoped, wished, and prayed, for a way to take Dan home and show him my country in all its glory, but it just wasn’t financially possible. His winning these tickets made it possible, and I can never even Begin to thank Ben Gurion University of the Negev, not only for the prize-winning tickets (See? Miracles do happen!), and thus this extraordinary trip, but for the amazing day they gave us in Beersheva, the meetings with their professors and students, and the chance to see some of their incredible scientific research projects that are literally making the deserts bloom!
This is the first of a number of posts I will be making about our month in Israel; I am starting with Tel Aviv,as that's where our trip began. I will then be blogging about Beersheva and Ben Gurion University, our week crisscrossing the Negev, staying at a winery and gourmet goat cheese farm, the nature preserves and archaeological sites we discovered, my 52nd birthday in Eilat riding camels, snorkeling, and SeaDooing with Dan; our Israel Railways train travel to the north of Israel and our time in the Golan and Galilee, riding horses and tasting wines; our travels to Akko, Tiberius, Safed, Nazareth, and Haifa, and finally our week in Jerusalem, and our Passover Seder with my BFF from the Israeli Army and her family in the city of my heart... and then about Italy, where we lingered for 5 nights on our way back to West Virginia, hunting for truffles and making pasta! As Dan is the Chef at our Inn, the Elkhorn Inn & Theatre, and he’s married to a bit of a ”foodie”, our trip involved a lot of eating and drinking and cooking, all of it wonderful! My hope is that my posts will literally make your mouth water, that you will check out the hot links for some great ideas, and then get on a plane and go explore!
On March 20, 2011, after a year of saving and planning (way too much planning, but thank G-d for the Internet, as it enabled me discover Tons of things I never would have known about otherwise! And I made ALL our lodging bookings over the internet, and everything turned out great!), and dreaming, off we went to Israel!
Dan, relaxing in Neve Tzedek
We drove, in the wee hours of the morn, to Roanoke, VA, and flew from there to La Guardia Airport in NYC, and took a cab to JFK (which is a Royal pain in the yoo-hoo!) to get our flight to Israel. Happily, we found a Korean-Japanese restaurant in JFK which totally delighted us with sushi, dumplings, and kimchi, and made a VERY Loooong day a bit more enjoyable! We flew Al Italia to Israel, and the one good thing I can say about them (besides the fact that you can get credit on Delta Skymiles...) is that the wine is free! Yes, you have to ask for it,. and sometimes beg & whine & plead & bat your eyelashes, but there is no such thing as bad Italian wine, and free Itallian wine makes a Very long flight, crammed so tightly into seats in Steerage Class that your feet go numb and swell to the size of balloons, barely bearable! Arriving in Tel Aviv, we took a taxi to our "home" for three nights: Villa Vilina (And yes, the website’s photos are the apt. where we stayed!). We had a cute rooftop apt. in an old, historic building in the hip Neve Tzedek neighborhood of downtown Tel Aviv, with a balcony overlooking both the old neighborhoods and the modern skyscrapers, as well as the awe-inspiring new construction! The great thing about Neve Tzedek is that you can walk almost everywhere- and walk we did!
View of Tel Aviv from our Villa Vilina terrace...

Dan, at our pied a terre in Neve Tzedek!

View of old & new Tel Aviv from our Villa Vilina apt.

The Tel Aviv neighborhoods that are now trendy, such as Neve Tzedek, were, when I lived in Tel Aviv in the early 1980s, the oldest and thus the most rundown ones; full of old buildings with terra cotta tile roofs and balconies, they had lots of character, but at best they were "funky" or "artsy", and most had fallen into terrible disrepair. (To give you an idea: in 1979 I lived in a Very cheap apt. near the Carmel Market; it had ironing boards jutting out of the walls as it had been a jeans "factory" and broken windows, and I opened my door with a knife, as the key had broken off in the lock! Now it’s a hot, chic neighborhood, and, like the rest of Trendy Tel Aviv, unless you have deep pockets indeed, it’s not for you!) With Tel Aviv now being a UNESCO World Heritage Site for its astonishing array of Bauhaus buildings, the skyline of Tel Aviv is a sea of construction cranes, more and more of the “cool” old buildings are being restored, and they've now become "boutique" hotels, gourmet restaurants, trendy clubs & cafes, & the fashionable hot spots! (Our Neve Tzedek apt. was a block from the Shalom Tower; in 1973, when I first came to Israel with my father, it was the tallest building in the Middle East, and taking the elevator up to the top to see the wax museum and the view was a Very big deal!) Foodies that we are, Dan and I took a cab from the airport straight to "Neve Tzedek - Makom Shel Basar" (“Neve Tzedek - A Place For Meat”), right across from our apartment, and plonked ourselves down in their lovely garden to enjoy cool glasses of Israeli white wine and a yummy meal! 


To sit outside on their terrace, eating excellent carpaccio with great Israeli olive oil and parm, and drinking a splendid Israeli white wine was a wonderful welcome home! And after jet lag wore off and we were wide awake at midnight, we had no trouble find cute wine bars and cafes on and off Shderot Rothschild (Rothschild Boulevard), just a few minutes walk from our apartment!
We woke up ridiculously early our first morning and walked through the Carmel Market to the beach to have a glorious breakfast of Melauach (a buttery, many-layered Yemenite pancake, served with tomato sauce, "schug" Yemenite hot sauce, and/or honey) and Shakshuka (a Moroccan breakfast skillet of eggs poached in a spicy tomato sauce), and Cafe Hafoukh ("upside down coffee"- a.k.a Cappuccino!) at an outdoor cafe on a south Tel Aviv beach. Melauach is basically my favorite food in life, and I was delighted that Dan fell in love with Shakshuka at first bite- he had it for breakfast as often as he could all month! We sat in the sun enjoying the gorgeous blue of the Med and the salt air, the people running their dogs along the beach and the surfers, Yeshiva students having a pre-class cup of coffee... watching Tel Aviv- a nightlife city that really Doesn't sleep!- wake itself up... We walked along the seaside and Hayarkon Street (which used to be a rather seedy stretch of dive bars, and is now full of "boutique hotels"!), and through downtown Tel Aviv, bought ourselves a cell phone (you HAVE to have a cell phone in Israel! It is totally impossible to function without one!), and then spent the afternoon at the Eretz Israel Museum, which focuses on the history and culture of Israel. Some of the exhibits we saw included the Kadman Numismatic Pavilion, with coins from ancient times to modern Israel, the Alexander Museum of Postal History, which has a LOT of cool things pertaining to the founding of the State of Israel going back 150 years; the Nehushtan Pavilion, dealing with the ancient Timna copper mines (later in our trip we went there, too!), the Rothschild Pavilion detailing the Rothschild family's contributions to Israel, and the Ceramics and Glass Pavilions. We got to see the four spectacular ancient mosaics and 12 century BCE Tel Qasile Excavations, as well- it really is an extraordinary museum, and one that I'd never been to before! The one downer was that I lost our camera- with our trip's first photos- in the taxi on the way to the museum... We had a glass of wine in the lovely Anina Cafe at the museum, where I licked my wounds over the lost camera as the sun set, took a cab to see the new Port with its trendy shops and cafes, and then had a great seafood dinner at Goocha on Dizengoff and Ben Gurion: a truly fabulous appetizer of duck breast wrapped around scallops, followed by Dan’s catfish and chips which he loved, and my yummy mussels with curry, coriander, and coconut milk! In the 1950s and '60s, Dizengoff was THE place to see and be seen- lined with elegant coffee and ice cream shops, it was Israel's answer to the cafe life of Europe. By the '80s it was becoming rather sad and seedy, but there were still lots of cafes, and I well recall sitting at “Mandy's Cherry”, founded by Mandy Rice Davies, over many an ice coffee… (Mandy and Christine Keeler were the two women of the infamous Profumo Scandal which brought down the British Government; Mandy later married Rafi Shauli, an Israeli entrepreneur, and launched Mandy’s Cherry, among other things...) Dizengoff is back again in full flower, and after dinner Dan and I strolled down Dizengoff, window-shopping the boutiques (Oh! The fabulous shoes!) while I pointed out to Dan places from my past...
Our next day was a “foodie” tour of Tel Aviv and Jaffa with Ben Brewer’s “Israel Food Tours” and it was grand! We did two of his tours (I wish we could have done them all!), and the great thing about them is that he and his excellent and knowledgeable guides take you places you NEVER would have known about or gotten to on your own- and I say that as an Israeli, who thought she “really knew” the places she’d lived! These are full day tours, worth every dime, and the best advice I can give anyone taking them is DON’T EAT A THING before you start! Our guide was Iren, and she first took us to Jaffa for a “lesson in Hummus” at THE best and most famous of Hummus restaurants: Abu Shukri!







We ate our way through Jaffa, sampling the famous orange Knafe cheese pastry and “birds nest” pastries of shredded phyllo dough filled with pistachios, enjoying breads fresh from brick ovens, and stopping to share with Dan a yummy cup of Sahlab- a hot, creamy custard made from orchids, served with coconut and chopped nuts on top. (My friends and I used to get Sahlab in Jerusalem at a kiosk by the Damascus Gate of the Old City, and it is Divine on a cool winter night!) We strolled through Old Jaffa’s seaport and meandered the winding streets full of lovely art galleries… and Railfans as we are, we were delighted to have coffee with Iren in the elegant café at Jaffa’s lovingly restored train station…

Sahlab!


Knafe and Bird's Nest Pastries in Jaffo!



Historic trains at Jaffo's restored Train Station 

Jaffo's Restored Train Station - Cafe



Back in Tel Aviv, we sampled sheseks (loquats- who knew?!), and Bedouin bread with lebaneh, right off the pan, at the Carmel Market, and we were able to buy Za’atar (a spice mixture of sumac, sesame seeds, and salt that is SO delicious to mix with olive oil and use as a bread dip…) and Yemenite Hawaiij spices for coffee to take home to Chef Dan’s kitchen at the Elkhorn Inn! The vegetables and fruit in the Carmel Market are magnificent and all in season, and so they taste divine. Blessedly, the sour, tasteless Wal-Mart tomato that ripened in a truck and has the mealy texture of cardboard is not to be found anywhere, nor is the moldy box of tasteless berries. In Israel, as in Europe, you buy what’s in season when it’s in season, and there is an abundance of vegetables and fruits available all year ‘round. The seemingly endless array of olives, pickles, hot peppers, cheeses, and spices is dazzling- and all fresh! I lived near the Carmel Market 1979-80, and never have I seen it so joyous and full of life and color; watching Dan enjoy it all, and relish the wonderful “opera” of tastes and smells, gave me great pleasure and let me enjoy it all with “new eyes”!
Bedouin Bread in the Shuk HaCarmel Market, Tel Aviv 



Spices! Shuk HaCarmel, Tel Aviv

After a great Moroccan market lunch of chicken, couscous, and salads (including the wonderful cracked Sura olives that I’ve only ever had in Israel…), we walked it off strolling through the tree-lined avenues of architectural Bauhaus splendor, learning from Iren the differences between the austere, rounded Bauhaus buildings and the more fanciful “eclectic” style buildings- my personal favorites! The recent UNESCO World Heritage Site fuss over the Bauhaus buildings is a great boon for Tel Aviv, but it amuses me a bit as I lived in and among them for years. Like everyone else around me, going about our daily business, tying the fuse wires together in the archaic electric boxes of our crumbling, “historic” buildings, we thought little of them; the "fancy" neighborhoods were the new ones in north Tel Aviv, and our neighborhoods of old buildings, cheek-by-jowl with the market and the dive bars along the beach, were considered "old hat"! We basically had no Clue what an architectural treasure we were living in!



 








(Iren, who is a wine expert, not only gave us tips on wineries to visit throughout Israel, she gave us what turned out to be THE best souvenir of our trip, something we literally used every, single day: a Golan Heights Winery corkscrew! Thank you, Iren!!!!)
Meeting up with Ben at the Iceberg Ice Cream Shop on Rothschild, we got to sample a world of wonderful sorbets: tangerine-basil, grapefruit-Campari, red fruits & tarragon, pears & wine, apricot-amaretto, lemon-mint… the things foodie dreams are made of!  ( You taste things like these sorbets, and Immediately plan what foods they'll go with, what courses you'll serve them between... and then realize that in order to offer them to Elkhorn Inn guests we'd have to make them ourselves! AAAAUGH!) Then Ben took us to the Keren HaTemanim (Yemenite Quarter) for our cooking lesson and dinner! This was a truly Great evening, and in the company of friends, we drank wine and the Nesher (“buzzard”) beer I'd remembered fondly from my days as a kibbutz volunteer in the '70s, and learned from the delightful restaurant owner how to make Yemenite schug (green hot pepper sauce), chicken soup, fennel-carrot salad, Yemenite hilbeh, tehina with lemon and garlic, and Yemenite Lachoukh bread! I loved watching Dan work with our chef and really learn from her how to cook Temani! Watching him expertly flip the spongy bread (think: Injara) from the little frying pan was a blast!
Dan & Elisse, making Yemenite Schug!

Two chefs, sharing techniques...

Ben & Dan & Nesher Beer!


Dan, making Yemenite bread


Two chefs making chicken soup!

Our wonderful Yemenite dinner!
After than incredible meal we literally Waddled home to Neve Tzedek, and the next morning, after a coffee at our fave Rothschild café… we took the Israel Railways train south...

Next: Israel, Part 2: Beersheva & Ben Gurion University of the Negev!