Egyptians prepare kebabs at a local restaurant in Cairo's northern suburb of Shubra.. Through streets strewn with rubbish where laundry lines hang from shabby apartment blocks, the tantalising smell of grilled kebabs lures patrons from across the Egyptian capital. AFP PHOTO / MOHAMED EL-SHAHED - AFP
Diners head to rubbish-strewn lanes to discover real taste of Cairo
Published: Sun 27 Sep 2015, 1:53 PM
cairo - Through streets strewn with rubbish where laundry lines hang from shabby apartment blocks, the tantalising smell of grilled kebabs lures patrons from across Cairo.
Kaber Subhi, in the Egyptian capital's northern suburb of Shubra, is one of a number of eateries that have become hits across the vast metropolis despite their decrepit surroundings.
One specialising in spicy sausage sandwiches even goes by the name Zizo Natana - the second word meaning "fetid" in Arabic.
These restaurants are becoming magnets for discerning diners, appealing not only to residents of Cairo's poorer neighbourhoods but also drawing well-to-do clients willing to travel across town.
At Kaber Subhi, the patrons may arrive in expensive cars but they sit at tables in an alleyway shooing away tenacious stray cats.
The restaurant is one of thousands in the city offering the staples of kofta, ground meat grilled on a spit, and kebab, pieces of beef or mutton, but customers say the dishes here are special.
"It is a mix of secret sauces," says owner Subhi Al Sayyid.
Nurridin Gevara, a pharmaceutical student who travelled to Kaber Subhi from an affluent Cairo suburb, sits at a table and orders kebabs, kofta, fried liver and an array of small plates of tahini sesame paste, salad and pickles.
As boisterous patrons finish off their plates, Gevara says he isn't bothered by the run-down atmosphere. "The cleanliness of the surroundings are not important," he says, tearing off a piece of Egyptian flatbread, the rich and starchy whole wheat staple served in stacks at such restaurants.
"The important thing is the meals are good and clean, and taste great."
Near the restaurant, a worker cuts pieces of meat that are placed on the charcoal grill, also in the alley, sending up clouds of smoke.
"Everything happens in front of us," says Walid Rashad, a 33-year-old engineer.
As midnight approaches more customers arrive, some of them families who stand patiently in the alley waiting for an empty table.
Evita Adib, a 30-year-old doctor, arrives with her husband, having travelled from the affluent Heliopolis neighbourhood for Kaber Subhi's molokhiya.
The Middle Eastern staple consists of a broth made from Jute leaves. Each country has its way of preparing the dish, which in Egypt is served thin and slimy, often with rice, chicken or rabbit on the side and sprinkled with a pungent mix of fried garlic and coriander.
Outside the remains of Old Cairo's Fatimid-era wall, Zizo Natana serves the capital's most famous sausage sandwiches at tables on the street. Hajj Zizo, the owner, has come to terms with his restaurant being known by its malodorous epithet, conceived by the legendary comedian and actor Adel Imam. In his 2003 film The Danish Experience, Imam, who plays a government minister, asks his snooty sons where they want to go for dinner, proposing one foul-sounding restaurant after another. "Should we go to Zizo the Fetid?" he asks in the film, and the name stuck.
"He's my friend," Hajj Zizo says of Imam. "Of course I sued him.
"My son said he was just joking. They called to apologise," says the rotund man, who inherited the shop from his father. "So, whatever, call it Zizo the Fetid."
His sandwiches, however, are considered second to none by his many fans.