Bath Chronicle

Bridging the Persian gulf

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IT’S absolutely no coincidenc­e that Sabrina Ghayour’s latest cookbook is all about ease.

She wrote Persiana Everyday during some major life changes: she had just become a stepmother to two young boys, and the new family were thrust into lockdown as the pandemic began.

Writing this cookbook, she says, was a very different experience. “I was previously unattached, not married, no kids, and then I wrote it with two stepsons while homeschool­ing. It was some kind of hell, but I think that’s why it became the ‘easy’ book.”

Having spent most of her life in London (she left tehran during the Iranian revolution in 1979), the 45-year-old chef now lives in Yorkshire with her husband Stephen, and two stepsons Olly, 9, and Connor, 13.

The everyday theme of the book is a culminatio­n of her changing style over the years.

When she wrote her first book, Persiana, in 2014, she says: “Nobody knew me – I was writing a book of recipes I really wanted to put out there, whereas now I think [of the recipes in her new book] this definitely doesn’t need that last sprinkle of whatever, or those nuts really didn’t make much of a difference, so I’ll leave them out.

“Simple, economical, flavourful” are the three things Sabrina says she wants to deliver to people in her cooking. “So I’m constantly trying to strip back ingredient­s where I can, because it’s cheaper.”

Ultimately, Sabrina has a sense of humour about her food – and she wants to take the pressure off everyone who tries her recipes.

That’s why she focuses on “flexibilit­y”, she says, as well as “giving people a sense of freedom and a sense of confidence, knowing that if they didn’t have extract of squirrel’s toenails or whatever, it’s fine. They can just use carrots – we’re all human.”

This is Sabrina’s sixth cookbook, and she regularly braves the steely critiques of her stepsons – but that doesn’t mean she’s completely fearless in the kitchen.

“Any person who tells you, ‘Oh, there’s no recipe I can’t do, doesn’t matter who’s it is’, and not have fear – is lying,” she says.

Sabrina has even had Michelinst­arred chefs try to make her recipes and they panic – just because “it’s a different discipline”.

She continues: “If you gave me your grandma’s apple cake recipe, of course I’m going to be worried, because I want to get it right, I want to do it justice, I’m not familiar with it... It isn’t my own domain of the way I cook.”

Sabrina remembers a time when she overcame this fear – by attacking it head on.

“For the longest time, I was nervous of making English roast potatoes and roasts. This was in my early 20s, and I had a catering gig.

“I remember calling up one of my friends, and I was like, ‘How do I make roast potatoes?’ She was like, ‘Are you joking?’ Because they [her friends] all knew I could cook, and they couldn’t, basically.

“She just talked me through it. I’d never done it before, but once you realise there’s a trick – hot oil, fluff them up and all of this kind of stuff, you’re like, ‘My God, this is so easy!’ And then you do it, and it becomes second nature to you.”

Well, almost everything Sabrina tries becomes second nature. “Choux pastry still stresses me out,” she admits.

But Persian food is her specialism and she’s spent much of her career giving the cuisine a bigger platform – but there are still misconcept­ions about it, she says.

“It’s nothing like Middle Eastern food,” Sabrina points out.

“We were responsibl­e for selling many of our ingredient­s far and wide through the Silk Roads. The one thing I always want people to know – and they are shocked by it – is Persians don’t use spice.

“We harvest 92% of the world’s saffron, and that’s it. There might be a pinch of cumin seeds in one rice recipe, and there endeth our use of spices. “Mindblowin­g, isn’t it?” This is the real difference between Persian and Middle Eastern cuisines. Middle Eastern is packed full of bold, spiced flavours, but she says: “Persians only use herbs, citrus and tomato as a flavour base.”

That’s why she calls it “a fantastic place to start” for new cooks, as Persian food is much simpler, according to Sabrina.

She even draws comparison­s between Persian food and the tastes of her home in Yorkshire. “We have this unfair labelling of the north of England, that it’s meat and potatoes” – but Persian food is similar and it isn’t necessaril­y a negative, she says.

“That’s the great thing [with Persian food], it marries so well with traditiona­l cultures, because we like our meat cooked all the way through, but we slow cook it – we like our stews, we like plain rice, whereas let’s say in England, it might be potato.

“So there are a lot of similariti­es, it’s only when you go to the Arab Middle East that things are vastly different.

“That’s the thing I probably want people to know – if I could say something, I’d be like, ‘Hey, Persians are not big lovers of spice’.”

Ghayour tells Prudence Wade why Her latest recipes work for

 ?? ?? Persiana Everyday by Sabrina Ghayour, £26, Aster.
Persiana Everyday by Sabrina Ghayour, £26, Aster.
 ?? ?? Sabrina Ghayour
Sabrina Ghayour

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