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Life & Style

Glitzy Dubai hungry for culinary fame

Published July 26, 2023
A general view of Dubai Downtown showing world’s tallest building Burj Al Khalifa, in Dubai United Arab Emirates. Photo: Reuters
A general view of Dubai Downtown showing world’s tallest building Burj Al Khalifa, in Dubai United Arab Emirates. Photo: Reuters

DUBAI: French chef Renaud Dutel never thought his career would take him to the United Arab Emirates’ glam hub of Dubai, but has found there a culinary capital in the making.

Five years since he was offered a spot at a fancy restaurant in the Gulf financial and tourism hub – better known for its skyscrapers than its food scene – Dutel is delighted to have “taken the risk”.

 An exterior view of STAY by Yannick Alleno, located at One&Only The Palm, Dubai, UAE. Photo: Instagram @stay_dubai
An exterior view of STAY by Yannick Alleno, located at One&Only The Palm, Dubai, UAE. Photo: Instagram @stay_dubai

Dubai cements position as gastronomy hub, gears up for Michelin stars

“I believe Dubai is at the beginning,” he told AFP as lobster cuts were sizzling on a skillet beside him at STAY, a Michelin-starred restaurant specialised in French cuisine on the city’s signature Palm Jumeirah man-made island.

“But (Dubai) is on the way to becoming one of the best destinations in the world to come to dine.”

Boasting about 13,000 restaurants and cafes, some of the city’s eateries are already making global waves.

 A chef prepares a dish in the kitchens of STAY by Yannick Alleno restaurant in Dubai on July 7, 2023. Photo: AFP
A chef prepares a dish in the kitchens of STAY by Yannick Alleno restaurant in Dubai on July 7, 2023. Photo: AFP

Last year, 11 Dubai restaurants were awarded the Middle East’s first Michelin stars, with more joining the prestigious club this year.

Some like STAY by Yannick Alleno clinched two stars, but none made it to three – Michelin’s highest honour.

Dubai restaurants earn Middle East’s first Michelin stars

“Dubai’s gastronomy scene has transformed the city into one of the most diverse and dynamic food hubs in the world,” said Issam Kazim of the local government’s tourism and economy department.

‘100 percent Dubai’

The UAE, a five-decade federation of seven emirates along the eastern coast of the Arabian Peninsula, lacks the rich culinary heritage of other Arab states.

The meat-heavy Emirati cuisine is strongly influenced by historic trade ties with present-day Iran and India.

But it did not see the “gastronomisation” that culinary traditions in much of the West did, according to Loic Bienassis of the European Institute for the History and Culture of Food.

Still, it “can be done”, he told AFP. “And political will can play a role.”

Instead, with expats largely outnumbering the local Emirati population, the city’s rich cultural mix has yielded a unique culinary identity.

 Solemann Haddad, head chef and co-owner at Moonrise Middle Eastern-Japanese fusion restaurant works at the rooftop spot with a backdrop of the Dubai skyline on July 3, 2023. Boasting about 13,000 restaurants and cafes, some of the Dubai’s eateries are already making global waves. Photo: AFP
Solemann Haddad, head chef and co-owner at Moonrise Middle Eastern-Japanese fusion restaurant works at the rooftop spot with a backdrop of the Dubai skyline on July 3, 2023. Boasting about 13,000 restaurants and cafes, some of the Dubai’s eateries are already making global waves. Photo: AFP

Moonrise, a rooftop restaurant which offers a Middle Eastern-Japanese fusion and only seats 12 people at a time, is a prime example.

Solemann Haddad, Moonrise’s head chef and co-owner, described the food as one-third European, one-third Japanese and one-third Arabic, “but it’s 100 percent Dubai”.

Haddad, born in the city to French and Syrian parents, won a coveted Michelin star last year at the ripe age of 27.

His dishes reflect the cosmopolitan spirit of Dubai, he told AFP, combining elements such as date syrup with a chutney of saffron and pineapple.

 A take on the popular Kashmiri Chai drink. Moonrise makes a sorbet with caramelised white chocolate, a salty date dukkah and marigold flowers. Photo: Instagram @moonrise.xyz
A take on the popular Kashmiri Chai drink. Moonrise makes a sorbet with caramelised white chocolate, a salty date dukkah and marigold flowers. Photo: Instagram @moonrise.xyz

Having established itself as a business and luxury hot spot, Dubai is now also attracting some of the world’s leading culinary names including Alleno and fellow Frenchman Pierre Gagnaire.

Dubai, Doha, London among top cities where international travellers loved to splurge in 2022

Desert-sourced

Britain’s Gordon Ramsay, Japan’s Nobu Matsuhisa and Italy’s Massimo Bottura have also joined the roster of celebrity chefs with a presence in the city.

But beyond importing top talent, Dubai is also fostering local stars, said Habib Al Mulla, an Emirati lawyer and culinary blogger who has reviewed more than 700 establishments worldwide.

“A new, young generation of homegrown chefs are coming up,” he told AFP.

“Many of them are winning… worldwide recognition.”

 A French dish garnished with Black Truffle and gold flakes at two Michelin-starred STAY by Yannick Alleno, Dubai, UAE. Photo: Instagram @stay_dubai
A French dish garnished with Black Truffle and gold flakes at two Michelin-starred STAY by Yannick Alleno, Dubai, UAE. Photo: Instagram @stay_dubai

Dubai’s rising culinary stars include not only chefs but also restauranteurs such as Omar Shihab, born and raised in the UAE to a Jordanian family.

The restaurant he founded, BOCA, was awarded the Michelin Green Star for sustainability this year.

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Shihab sources a bulk of his produce from the UAE – a feat in a country that imports more than 80 percent of its food needs.

“Let’s face it, we live in the desert,” he told AFP.

“But through our sourcing policy, we prioritise local ingredients.”

Some 30-40 percent of fruit and vegetables served at BOCA come from hydroponic Emirati farms, and up to 80 percent of the fish sourced from the UAE or nearby shores, said Shihab.

“We do not have any local or regional suppliers” for meat and chicken, he said.

“But we make sure that the farms we rely on, we know their names, we know a little bit about their practises, no matter where they are in the world.”

Dubai retains position as world’s top destination for tourism FDI in 2021

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