Fava Bean Soup
…the Fez Medina is the largest in Africa…
mosque in Africa (the spectacular Qairaouiyine). Fez-elbali is also the largest car-free urban area in the world.
Our base is Riad Laaroussa, a grand sanctuary of carved plaster, mosaic floors and orange trees. Once a 17th-century home, its rooms have been meticulously restored to a former splendour. Four storeys high, the Riad (Arabic for house or palace) Laaroussa has an open roof for lounging, dining and gazing over the medina. The spectacular view is dominated by the striking green roofs of the Qaraouiyine Mosque complex and the ruined Merenid Tombs beyond. Eight Laaroussa guestrooms frame an interior courtyard and fountain. Its two resident Labrador Retrievers (pets of the riad’s European owners) lumber to their feet upon our return home from a day of wandering, our necks cricked from looking up at the carved woodwork, the faded stucco decorations and magnificent crumbling architecture of monuments and mosques, and peering at herbalists and spice sellers, coppersmiths and boilermakers, butchers and bakers, pungent tanneries and wily carpet sellers, mule cart drivers, squawking chickens and stray cats. In short, all the ordered busy-ness of daily life in the medieval labyrinth.
Within the medina are the souks, or markets. They can be long lengths of stands or a small nest of tents tucked along the bend of an alleyway, each clustered together selling the same thing: rugs, copper pots, clay tagines, spices, beef, fish, olives, bread.
Or chickens. It was in the chicken souk where an Australian woman fainted just in front of us. I had been attempting to take photographs of the butcher slitting the throat of the complaining bird, when the Aussie went down saying, as she keeled over, that it was “all a bit too real.” Her husband required help from mine laying her down on the blood-stained, feather-dusted lane amongst a few clucking hens. The feral cats paid no mind to her or the chickens, too fixated on the breakfast of entrails they were about to receive from the butcher.
She was ushered into a neighbouring shop, offered mint tea and a chance to compose herself. We left her just as the water was boiling and the carpets were being unrolled for inspection.
We were off to meet a woman who needed no map. Siham Lahmine of the tour group Plan-itMorocco had agreed to help us get our bearings, to understand better the life within the walls, and particularly the food life in the souks.
She starts us off with “breakfast for men”, bowls of fava bean soup called bessara, thick, garlicky and fragrant of salted cumin, slick with olive oil, served with bread. Two little boys with matching Power Rangers schoolbags giggle at the sight of us. I ask Siham what was funny. We are women, she tells me, at a table where only men sit, eating guy food.
We bump into the boys again as they are leaving the ferrane, maybe the most fascinating stop on our food tour. They’ve just dropped off their mum’s dough for baking at the communal oven before scurrying off to school. The smell wafting out of the narrow doorway should have been enough to help us find the bakery, the “hub of the neighbourhood,” as Siham describes it. But Ken and I had passed this narrow door earlier in the day, before the drama in the chicken souk, ignorant of the subterranean labour so key to the rhythm of daily life.
Siham leads us down the steps to meet the bakers. A dozen round loaves are spread on differently checked, cloth-lined wooden palletts on the 400-year-old clay floor. This is traditional Arabic bread called khobz or khubz. Each loaf is marked with a metal dowel the baker holds in his teeth before committing it to the clay ovens. This is to know to whom the bread belongs — the family, food cart, riad or restaurant — Siham tells us, though usually it’s not necessary. “He just knows by the look of the bread,” she laughs as our eyes take in the hundreds of identical looking loaves. The ferrane is the sum of two medina realities: the essential nature of bread in Moroccan culture and the paucity of space in Moroccan medinas. Bread is everywhere and in every meal in Morocco, and the communal ferrane is where it gets baked.
Later, we will eat Fez’ famous celebratory dish of bastilla, a warqa-wrapped pie stuffed with shredded pigeon, saffron, onion, nuts, spices and herbs, eggs and orange blossom water. It too is baked in the ferrane before it’s dusted with powdered sugar and patterned with cinnamon.
(The following day I come across a woman making warqa — the phyllo-like wrap of the bastilla — slapping fistfuls of spongy batter over and over in concentric circles on a round grill to form a large, almost transparent film of pastry, which she peels off in one swift motion. I point to my camera and ask if I might capture her hands in action. She hisses at me and I scuttle away, feeling ashamed.)
Siham has found a young man to make us street lunch. He’s perfectly happy to have his work admired and his wares photographed. In his New York Yankees cap, he sizzles and chops up slices of sausage — camel spleen bulging with beef, lamb and camel meat — on the griddle next to his family’s butcher stand. He stuffs the meat, mixed with onion, lard, olives, preserved lemon and chili powder, into a halved loaf of khobz. A bit further along we are introduced to ghoulal, snail broth, ladled out of a mammoth silver tureen that bubbles atop the propane fire of the soup-maker’s cart. We use toothpicks to extract the meat from the shell and slurp up every bit of the fragrant broth.
Next stop is the olive souk. Olives are Morocco’s most important fruit. The displays in the market are a visual feast — pyramids of green, brown, scarlet and yellow, olives tight skinned and wrinkled. There are pickles too, and preserves, housed in baskets, buckets and jars. We are given samples to eat immediately. And we buy jars of preserved lemons and harissa (chili paste) for the suitcase home. And then it’s off to meet the date vendors with their beautiful displays of nuts and dried fruits, ancient scales at the ready.
Most of our purchases — the ones that attract the sniffy dogs at the Montreal airport — are from Chez Dwitcha. A spice seller and homespun apothecary, its proprietor, Mohammed, doles out remedies for
everything from my slightly-wobbly tummy to my husband’s post-flight congestion. We buy paprika, cumin and the house ras el hanout. Translated, it means ‘top of the shop,’ a custom medley of spices used in most traditional Moroccan dishes, from tagines to couscous, grilled meats and soups, to the Moroccan baked eggs we enjoy for breakfast. The main spices in Mohammed’s ras el hanout are cumin, coriander, cinnamon, cardamom, cayenne, turmeric, allspice, nutmeg and pepper. Though his particular blend, he tells us with a cheeky grin, includes spices and aromatics that we are not to know. Those mysteries are now housed in my Ottawa spice drawer.
Our last stop with Siham isn’t the prettiest market, but it is the sweetest. It’s also quiet. The Fondouk Kaat Smen is the honey souk, and it boasts its own arched courtyard. We are led to a side room, where large blue plastic buckets hold perhaps two dozen varieties of wild honey. Sahim ladles up lavender honey and eucalyptus honey, orange blossom and sweet fig, gentle chamomile, gritty carob, and the ultra-bitter arbutus honey, born of bees feeding from the strawberry trees. We taste all of them and wander home on a sweet high.
The soft hum of the sunset call to prayer escorts us out of the souk. It grows in intensity, blaring “Allahu Akbar” by the time we say a farewell to Sahim. We approach Riad Laaroussa, bags bulging with food treats, our maps now tossed, the darkening alleyways ever so slightly more familiar.
…each loaf is marked with a metal dowel…