La Maison Arabe Cooking Class
Perhaps travel cannot prevent bigotry, but by demonstrating that all peoples cry, laugh, eat, worry, and die, it can introduce the idea that if we try and understand each other, we may even become friends.—Maya Angelou
We are great believers that if you have peace, you have everything.
—Wafaa Amagui, La Maison Arabe Marrakech
Excitement swells as two enormous doors slowly swing open. I remember entering this haven of hospitality the previous fall when I first saw La Maison Arabe Country Club.
But this time I’ll be the one in the kitchen, and I can’t wait.
Our van journeys along the long lane lined with olive trees until the driver brakes. We follow the path through a green garden of palm trees swaying to a convivial choir of birds soaring, sitting, and singing. A bouquet of herbal heaven on the breeze—the scent of rose geraniums, rosemary, sage, and lemon thyme– beckons us to pinch, rub, and smell the distinct fragrances of each plant. Gracious and gregarious, Wafaa, La Maison Arabe’s Cooking Workshops Manager, greets us as we take our seats around the tented table.
Organic artichokes
Pit for roasting meat
Breakfast Buffet
The idea was a real adventure. .. Being inside the medina next to local people day and night seeing how people live…the smell of food… children playing all the time, women who run between work at job and work in house, men all the time in cafes gives people outside an opportunity to ask questions and to know a lot about Morocco’s style of life.
This first riad hotel led to thousands more, transforming Marrakech into a popular tourist destination which employed many and enhanced cross-cultural understanding:
People from outside Morocco see Moroccan people. We have families. We are very protective of our children. And we have this respect…. Moroccans are very tolerant, flexible people. You don’t feel isolated. People are ready to serve, to help, even to practice language. Whatever language you are speaking, we are very eager to speak it with you.
As is Moroccan tradition, we were served mint tea with bread, which we helped bake, honey, and jam.
Moroccans, unless diabetic, drink tea with a lot of sugar. It comes in large blocks and is broken into chunks.
Into the kitchen… (Photos by Jasna Finlay)
Ayoda, the Dada (Chef)
For the base of the Chicken Tagine with Preserved Lemon and Olives, my favorite meat dish in Morocco
For the Zalouk, my favorite dish of the day, we “zebraed” the eggplant and cooked with tomato, garlic, and fresh herbs.
Two hands are better than one for stirring the tagine and Taktuka, Moroccan tomato and roasted green pepper salad.
Picked from outside the kitchen
The Dada showed us how to cut a lemon peel into a decorative leaf.
She also demonstrated how preserved lemons are made. They are slit, filled with salt, and partially covered with olive oil. As they age, they turn darker.
Custard for the Milk Pastilla served for dessert
In Morocco, though we are conservative, we live and let other people live. Morocco as a country is very tolerant. It accepts people’s traditions. Whatever your religion is, whatever your ideas…whatever your way of life, it does not matter to us. We respect our culture and we respect other people’s cultures.–Wafaa
Oh those tagines and (almost) all food that’s Moroccan – so wonderful! We’ve already got a cooking class arranged for a future trip to Fes and your post has highlighted so many of the features of the fabulous cuisine. Loved your photos and the feeling of “being there” in La Maison’s class! Anita
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Glad you enjoyed the post, Anita and Richard, and I think you will love Morocco as I have the last two year. If you get to Marrakesh maybe we can meet.
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What a wonderful feast! Morocco is on my must-visit list. This looks like a delicious class.
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Thank you, Sue. It was! So glad you plan to visit Morocco–the country is a feast!
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