At 50, Brazil’s Beirut Sandwich Is Still Served As It Was Created

In the city of São Paulo in the 1950s, in a diner called Dunga, the brothers Jorge and Fauze Farah served a sandwich with roast beef, tomato and cheese to their clients when one day they ran out of sliced bread.

The brothers adapted with Syrian bread and gave it an extra touch with zatar – a fine herbs seasoning. The two sons of Syrians decided to name their newest creation Beirut, in homage to the capital city of Lebanon.

But why not the capital of Syria? "It’s because Damascus would sound a little strange as the name of a sandwich," jokes Paulo Abbud, nephew of the Farahs.

In Portuguese, "Damasco", the name of the Syrian capital, also means "apricot". Abbud is the owner of Farabbud (union of the two surnames), a charming Arab food restaurant located in the neighborhood of Moema, in São Paulo.

The dish created by the Farahs became a national sandwich. But, according to Paulo, there are variations that are uncharacteristic of the original Beirut.

"Today, everything that goes on Syrian bread is called Beirut," he says. The real thing, he explains, has to have tomato, cheese and zatar. When there is roast beef, it has to be cooked. And the sandwich has to be very thin. At Farabbud, as well as the original, Paulo created adaptations with tenderloin, chicken and even kaftas. The "Farabbud" Beirut takes ham and tenderloin strips.

Paulo Abbud comes from a family with a special liking for Arab cooking. As well as his uncles, his father also owned a restaurant, the Flamingo. And a traditional restaurant called Bambi, which existed for 50 years, belonged to another of Paulo’s uncles.

Farabbud has been in operation for four years and serves, on average, 3,500 people per month. The idea, says the owner, is to serve Arab dishes tasting like grandma’s home cooked meal.

Indeed, there are in the menu exclusive recipes made by Paulo’s grandmothers. One of them is the Abbud version to Herice soup, made with grains of wheat and shredded chicken. Another, passed from generation to generation, is the family recipe of Chacrie, pieces of beef cooked in curd. "We grew up eating this food," recalls Paulo.

Apart from the culinary bond, Paulo doesn’t hold anything else of the Arab culture. "My grandparents came when they were children. Nothing remained, not the customs, not the language. I am a typical Brazilian", he says.

But the food remained. Luckily for the fans of Arab food, who can taste the classics raw kibbeh, rolls, tabule and, of course, Beiruts, everything as the families Abbud and Farah used to eat.

Farabbud

Alameda dos Anapurus, 1253, Moema, São Paulo, Brazil
Telephone: (+55 11) 5054-1648

Anba – www.anba.com.br

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil Learns How to Tame the Wiretap Under the Rule of Law

When it hears certain notes from the “white-bellied go-away” bird (Corythaixoides leucogaster), a small ...

Brazilian Stocks Stop Bleeding and Get Slight Jump

After a gray Tuesday, which saw the Brazilian stock suffer its worst tumble in ...

For Lula, 2006 Will Bring the Brazil He Dreams Of

In his weekly radio program, "Breakfast with the President," Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula ...

19 Years Later, Brazilian Jury Acquits Defendant on Missionary Death

The seven jurors of the second trial related to the murder of Cimi’s  (Indianist ...

US Sends 650 Athletes to the Pan in Brazil

Mike Leavitt, the United States Department of Health and Human Services secretary, is in ...

Damn, Brazil Won!

For its own sake Brazil should have lost. Bringing the World Cup home will ...

Global Warming Might Turn Brazil’s Amazon into Scrubland

The conference held in the United Kingdom early this month on climatic changes cautioned ...

RAPIDINHAS

Unable as Itamar Franco appears to be to see himself for what he isn’t, ...

Brazilian Gets Hollywood’s Women in Film Filmmaker Grant

Winners of the WIF Latina New Filmmaker Grant, announced in February by Women In ...

Tobacco Growers in Brazil Can’t Do Anything Else

Tobacco is the chief crop in Santa Cruz do Sul, 167 kilometers from Porto ...