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Harissa is as important to the eating desk as salt in Tunisia. It is an ever-present condiment, from elegant eating places in whitewashed Sidi Bou Said to roadside snack bars in Mahdia.
“It’s the base of our entire cuisine,” says the Tunis painter Myriame Dachraoui as she prepares a lunchtime unfold in her kitchen in La Marsa, a bohemian seaside suburb of Tunis. Today, Dachraoui is making ojja, a basic harissa recipe much like, and generally indistinguishable from, Tunisia’s most well-known dish, shakshuka, including crimson dabs of thick paste from a plastic bag into the pan as if making use of the remaining touches to her canvas. Quantity issues: not an excessive amount of, not too little.
“Before we eat, Tunisians make a little appetiser,” she explains. “Add olive oil around the harissa so it brings balance and softens the heat, then scatter tuna and capers to soak with bread.” This isn’t the puréed, or “industrial” tubed harissa present in British supermarkets (notably the well-known Tunisian Le Phare Du Cap Bon model). The model she makes use of – as does just about everybody in Tunisia – is home made harissa arbi (the title comes from the Arabic verb harassa, to crush): a thick, aromatic sauce sometimes product of roasted crimson and baklouti peppers, a spice and herb mix, and olive oil.
It is usually smoked on the enchanting island of Djerba the place, close to the chilli fields of Gabès, the previous Jewish inhabitants preserves various recipes to conventional Tunisian cuisine. On our go to, a brik (a deep fried and stuffed pastry) served with harissa within the Sephardic quarter of Hara shocked Dachraoui. Further south, utilizing the Islamic centre of Kairouan as a place to begin, one other kind of harissa crushed with onions and garlic named h’rousse turns into the favoured condiment. Then, on the japanese tip, nestled on the glowing coasts of Cap Bon, which stretches out like a finger towards Sicily, is Nabeul – the house of harissa – the place Moorish refugees from Andalusia settled within the seventeenth century, bringing with them the important capsicum pepper. Visitors are greeted by the waft of spices from the market, the place dried peppers hold exterior yellow-tiled shopfronts and streetside banners declare: “Nabeul: capitale mondiale de’harissa.”
Raising the jar
Les Moulins Mahjoub Tunisian Traditional harissa, £7.25 for 185g, artisanoliveoilcompany.co.uk
Saveurs Du Cap Bon harissa Arbi Fumée, €1.50 for 180g
Zwïta Spicy Traditional harissa, £9.35 for 170g
Le Phare Du Cap Bon harissa paste, £5.25 for 760g, bonnebouffe.co.uk
Its environs maintain nearly all of factories and chilli farms – countless inexperienced lanes tended by men and women sporting palm leaf hats that shield them from the solar. These employees, who endure the noon warmth, observe a 1,000-year-old Amazigh calendar named Ajmi to information their farming cycles.
It conjures up a lot pleasure {that a} harissa pageant is held in Nabeul every October by the colorful celeb chef Rafik Tlatli. As he stands in his chef’s whites, Tlatli’s chest flaunts a powerful medallion surrounded by numerous pin badges from competitions and occasions the world over – he’s despatched overseas as an envoy for Tunisian delicacies. He is Mr Harissa. “We’re the biggest exporter on the globe. But our priority with the festival has always been to ensure people visit Nabeul to buy and learn about authentic local harissa,” Tlatli explains. “It is a part of our identity.”
Harissa is ingrained within the nation’s consciousness: pharmacies promote medication with illustrations of sentient peppers struggling indigestion, and empty Cap Bon tins are repurposed as pen pots or vases. In 2022, the paste grew to become protected as a part of Unesco’s intangible Cultural Heritage listing, as a Tunisian product – key phrase: Tunisian. Much is owed to Tlatli, who has dedicated himself to empowering the status of Tunisian harissa overseas. He wrote the preliminary letter to the UN. “Once we started making progress, the government joined us to take action,” he says. When I ask if there’s nonetheless debate over its origins, he jokingly replies: “Says who? I’ll find them!”
“The UN recognition certainly put a lot of arguments to bed,” says Sami Lamiri, founding father of Lamiri Harissa. We meet in La Marsa. Lamiri spends half of his time right here, assembly producers, and the opposite in London, the place he was raised and the place his harissa has turn out to be fashionable with cooks and residential cooks, largely by word-of-mouth. The enterprise is a part of his mission to introduce genuine product to the UK. “When we started three years ago, I was smuggling jars in my suitcase using my grandma’s recipe,” he says. “People loved it, and so it took off.”
Each of his jars reads: “Imported from Tunisia: the home of Harissa” in daring, upper-case kind. It’s some extent made. “London has too few Tunisian restaurants, so people aren’t aware of how important harissa is,” Lamiri notes. His model has earned a following in Tunis, and is stocked on the stylish Bleue! retailer in Sidi Bou Said. “Harissa is a part of every Tunisian’s life. As kids, me and my cousins would place bets on who could eat the most,” he says. “As an adult, Lamiri has allowed me to rediscover my heritage, find a home here and, as we grow, take people on the journey along with me.”
It’s a journey that I fortunately reignite again in London. I spot Lamiri Harissa at a deli in Shoreditch after which a bakery close to Charing Cross. When I come down with a chilly, the 2 scarlet pots of harissa in my fridge from La Marsa’s souk remind me of a bit of recommendation from Dachraoui – a form of folktale handed by way of the generations: once you’re ailing, you eat harissa. Of course you do. Whether sick or homesick, for Tunisians, harissa is at all times the treatment.