The Lebanese table is one of the world's most generous — a mezze spread of 20 or 30 small dishes, arriving all at once, designed to be shared freely and eaten without hurry. Lebanese cuisine sits at the crossroads of Mediterranean, Middle Eastern, and ancient Levantine traditions, combining the fresh herbs and olive oil of the Mediterranean with the aromatic spice blends, legume cookery, and grain dishes of the wider Arab world. It is a cuisine that has fed civilisations for millennia and is increasingly recognised as one of the healthiest food cultures on earth.
The Heart of Lebanese and Middle Eastern Cuisine: Origins and Philosophy
The Levant — modern-day Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, Israel, and Palestine — is one of the cradles of human agriculture. Wheat, chickpeas, lentils, figs, pomegranates, and olives were all domesticated in this region, and the flavour combinations built around these ingredients 10,000 years ago are still being prepared in the same cities today. Lebanese cuisine is the most internationally known representative of Levantine cooking, partly due to the Lebanese diaspora — one of the world's most widely distributed — which has carried the food to every continent.
The philosophical heart of Lebanese and Middle Eastern cooking is karam — generosity. In Lebanon, feeding a guest is an act of honour, and a table is never considered full until it is overwhelmed with food. This manifests in the mezze tradition: not a few small bites before the main course, but a complete meal system of dozens of dishes served simultaneously at the centre of the table.
Balance of flavours and textures is achieved through the strategic use of pomegranate molasses (tart, sweet, and deep), sumac (fruity acidity), tahini (rich, sesame bitterness), and fresh lemon juice. No single flavour dominates; they modulate each other across the meal. The result is food that stimulates the palate continuously rather than satisfying it in a single note.
The Ottoman Empire's 400-year presence across much of the region created a shared culinary vocabulary across the entire Eastern Mediterranean — dishes like kibbeh, falafel, baklava, stuffed grape leaves (warak enab), and muhammara appear in slightly different forms across Lebanon, Syria, Turkey, Greece, and Iran, each culture claiming them as their own. This shared heritage is part of what makes Middle Eastern food so fascinatingly interwoven.
“Lebanese food is an expression of who we are — generous, joyful, deeply rooted in the land, and always cooked with love.”
— Anissa Helou, Lebanese food writer and author of Feast
The Essential Pantry: Ingredients You Need
The Middle Eastern pantry is built on aromatic spices, ancient grains, and a handful of key condiments.
**Tahini**: Pure sesame paste, made by grinding toasted sesame seeds. Buy good-quality tahini — it should be pourable and smooth, not gritty or bitter. Lebanese brands like Cortas and Al Wadi are excellent. Tahini is used in hummus, baba ganoush, dressings, and sauces.
**Pomegranate molasses**: Made from reduced pomegranate juice, this thick, dark syrup is simultaneously sweet, tart, and rich. Use it in salad dressings (fattoush), marinades, dips (muhammara), and glazes for meats. No real substitute, but a mix of balsamic vinegar and a little honey comes close in a pinch.
**Sumac**: Dried and ground berries from the Rhus coriaria shrub, producing a deep burgundy powder with a fruity, lemony acidity. Sprinkled generously on salads (fattoush), hummus, and grilled meats. No substitute — it is a unique flavour.
**Za'atar**: A blend of dried thyme or hyssop, sumac, sesame seeds, and salt. Used as a dry condiment mixed with olive oil and served with bread, as a crust for roasted meats, and in dressings. Regional blends vary in herb proportion and heat.
**Seven spice (baharat)**: A warm blend of allspice, black pepper, cinnamon, coriander, cumin, cloves, and nutmeg — different in every household. Used in meat dishes, rice pilafs, and braises. Buy a good Lebanese brand or make your own.
**Freekeh**: Roasted green wheat with a smoky, nutty character. Used as a grain pilaf and in hearty soups. Whole wheat, quinoa, or farro are substitutes.
**Bulgur wheat**: Parboiled and dried cracked wheat — the base of kibbeh and tabbouleh. Comes in fine, medium, and coarse grades.
**Rose water and orange blossom water**: Floral waters used to perfume desserts, fruit salads, and rice dishes. Use sparingly — they are potent.
**Dried legumes**: Chickpeas, lentils (red, green, and black), fava beans (for ful medames) — the protein backbone of the cuisine.
**Preserved lemons**: Salt-cured lemons used in North African dishes that have spread into Levantine cooking.
**Fresh herbs**: Flat-leaf parsley and mint are used in enormous quantities — not as garnishes but as primary ingredients in dishes like tabbouleh.
For the best hummus, cook your own chickpeas from dried rather than using tinned — soak overnight, cook with baking soda, and peel the skins for a much smoother, creamier result. The difference is remarkable.
5 Foundational Techniques
**1. Making tahini sauce (taratour)**: Blend tahini with lemon juice and ice-cold water, whisking until smooth. The tahini will first seize and turn thick — keep adding water and whisking and it will eventually loosen to a creamy, pourable consistency. Season with garlic, salt, and more lemon. The cold water is key — it keeps the sauce from splitting and creates a lighter texture.
**2. Roasting and peeling aubergine for baba ganoush**: The aubergine must be charred directly over an open flame — gas hob, grill, or barbecue — until the skin is completely blackened and the interior is completely soft. This charring imparts the irreplaceable smoky flavour. Cool, then scoop out the flesh, discarding the skin. Press in a sieve to remove excess liquid before mixing with tahini, lemon, and garlic.
**3. Working with bulgur for kibbeh**: Fine bulgur is used in kibbeh — rinse, then soak in cold water for 15 minutes only. Squeeze thoroughly dry in a kitchen towel. The soaked bulgur is mixed directly with minced meat and spices — no cooking required at this stage. The mixture should be kneaded together until it forms a cohesive, almost paste-like mixture.
**4. Making a spice-scented ghee (samneh)**: Melt butter slowly over very low heat until the milk solids separate and begin to toast lightly. Strain through muslin. Add a cinnamon stick and cardamom pod to the warm ghee and leave to infuse for 10 minutes. This scented ghee is drizzled over hummus, rice dishes, and roasted meats.
**5. Building a Lebanese rice with vermicelli**: Toast fine vermicelli noodles in butter or ghee until deeply golden. Add washed and drained long-grain rice, stir to coat, then add stock or salted water (1.5x the volume of rice). Bring to a boil, cover tightly, reduce heat to the lowest setting, and cook 18 minutes. Rest 10 minutes before fluffing. The toasted vermicelli creates a nutty flavour and visual contrast that distinguishes Lebanese rice from plain.
Essential Recipe 1: Kibbeh bil Sanieh (Baked Layered Kibbeh)
Kibbeh is Lebanon's national dish — a mixture of fine bulgur and minced lamb. The baked version is a layered casserole of raw kibbeh shell, a spiced meat and onion filling, and another layer of kibbeh on top, baked until crisp.
**Serves 6 to 8**
**For the kibbeh shell**: 300 g fine bulgur wheat; 500 g lean lamb, minced to a paste in a food processor; 1 medium onion, grated; 1 tsp seven spice; 1/2 tsp cinnamon; 1/2 tsp allspice; salt and white pepper; ice water as needed.
**For the filling (hashweh)**: 300 g coarsely minced lamb; 2 medium onions, finely diced; 50 g pine nuts, toasted; 1 tbsp seven spice; 1/2 tsp cinnamon; salt and pepper; 2 tbsp butter or ghee.
**Method**: 1. Soak fine bulgur in cold water for 15 minutes. Squeeze completely dry. 2. Combine bulgur with food-processor-minced lamb, grated onion, spices, and salt. Knead for 5 minutes until very smooth. Add ice water one tablespoon at a time if the mixture feels dry or stiff. Refrigerate 30 minutes. 3. For the filling: sauté onion in butter until soft and golden. Add lamb and brown, breaking up lumps. Season with spices. Stir in toasted pine nuts. Cool. 4. Preheat oven to 200 °C / 390 °F. Oil a 30 x 20 cm baking dish generously. 5. Divide the kibbeh shell mixture in half. Wet your hands and press one half evenly into the base of the dish in a smooth, even layer about 1 cm thick. 6. Spread the cooled filling over the kibbeh base. 7. Press the remaining kibbeh shell over the top in an even layer, sealing the edges. 8. Score the top in a diamond pattern. Drizzle generously with olive oil. 9. Bake for 30 to 35 minutes until the top is golden brown and the edges are crisp. 10. Rest for 10 minutes. Serve with yogurt, a green salad, and Lebanese rice.
**Tips**: Dipping your hands in cold water continuously when pressing the kibbeh shell prevents it from sticking. The top layer is the trickiest — work in small pieces and patch any tears.
Pine nuts can be expensive — lightly toasted and roughly chopped walnuts make an excellent and more economical substitute in the kibbeh filling.
Essential Recipe 2: Chicken Shawarma
Shawarma is one of the world's great street foods — marinated meat slow-roasted on a vertical spit, shaved into flatbreads with pickles and garlic sauce. This home oven version captures all the flavour without the rotisserie.
**Serves 6**
**For the marinade**: 1 kg boneless chicken thighs; 150 g whole-milk yogurt; 3 tbsp lemon juice; 4 garlic cloves, minced; 2 tbsp olive oil; 1 tbsp ground cumin; 1 tbsp ground coriander; 1 tsp turmeric; 1 tsp sweet smoked paprika; 1 tsp seven spice; 1/2 tsp cinnamon; 1/2 tsp cayenne; 1.5 tsp salt.
**For the garlic sauce (toum)**: 1 whole head of garlic, cloves peeled; 1 tsp salt; 400 ml neutral oil (sunflower or vegetable); 60 ml lemon juice; 60 ml ice water. Blend garlic and salt. With blender running on low, drizzle in oil and alternating lemon juice and water extremely slowly until a thick, white, fluffy emulsion forms.
**For serving**: Warm flatbreads; sliced tomatoes and cucumber; pickled cucumbers; fresh parsley.
**Method**: 1. Combine all marinade ingredients and mix thoroughly. Coat chicken thighs completely. Marinate refrigerated for at least 4 hours, ideally 24 hours. 2. Preheat oven to 230 °C / 450 °F. Line a baking tray with foil. 3. Lay marinated chicken thighs on the tray in a single layer. Roast for 25 to 30 minutes until charred at the edges and cooked through (internal temperature 75 °C / 165 °F). 4. Rest 5 minutes, then slice into thin strips with a sharp knife. 5. Serve piled into warm flatbreads with toum, pickles, tomatoes, and parsley.
**Tips**: The toum (garlic sauce) is extraordinary but requires patience — add the oil impossibly slowly at first or it will not emulsify. Once established, you can speed up. Leftover toum keeps for one month refrigerated and is incredible on everything.
For extra smokiness, finish the sliced chicken in a very hot, dry cast-iron pan for 2 minutes before serving.
Regional Variations You Should Know
The Middle Eastern culinary world is vast, and Lebanon represents just one strand of a much larger tradition.
**Lebanon**: Renowned for the quality and abundance of its mezze, Lebanon's cuisine is lighter and fresher than many of its neighbours, with a heavy emphasis on raw vegetables, fresh herbs, and olive oil. Kibbeh, tabbouleh (one of the most parsley-intensive dishes on earth — the bulgur is the accent, not the base), fattoush, and raw kibbeh (kibbeh nayeh) eaten with bread are signature preparations.
**Syria**: Syrian cuisine shares much with Lebanese food but features more stuffed dishes (mahshi), more complex spice profiles, and the extraordinary tradition of Aleppo pepper — a mild, oily, slightly sweet red chilli flake from the city of Aleppo that has become beloved by chefs globally.
**Jordan**: Mansaf is Jordan's national dish — whole lamb slow-braised in fermented dried yogurt (jameed), served over a bed of rice on flatbread with the rich jameed sauce poured over everything. It is eaten communally with the right hand.
**Iran (Persia)**: Persian cuisine is distinct from Arab Levantine cooking — it features saffron rice dishes (chelow and polo), pomegranate and walnut stews (fesenjan), herb-packed kuku (Persian frittata), and the extraordinary tradition of serving fresh herbs (sabzi) at every meal as a condiment.
**Egypt**: Egyptian food is earthier and more legume-centric than Levantine cooking. Ful medames (slow-cooked fava beans with lemon, garlic, and olive oil) is the national breakfast dish — eaten by every level of society. Koshary (rice, lentils, pasta, crispy onions, and spiced tomato sauce) is the definitive Egyptian street food.
Key Takeaways
Lebanese and Middle Eastern cuisine is an invitation into one of the world's most deeply rooted food cultures — one that has fed civilisations for ten millennia and continues to evolve without losing its essential character. Start with hummus, made from scratch with soaked chickpeas and great tahini, and understand why nothing you have bought in a supermarket has ever tasted quite like the real thing. Build toward kibbeh, then shawarma, then the full mezze spread. Along the way you will discover a pantry of aromatic spices, a philosophy of communal generosity, and a collection of vegetable, grain, and legume dishes that are as good for your health as they are deeply pleasurable to eat.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between hummus bi tahini and regular hummus?▼
Is Middle Eastern food suitable for vegetarians and vegans?▼
What is za'atar and how do I use it?▼
How long does toum (Lebanese garlic sauce) keep and how do I use it?▼
Do I need any special equipment to cook Lebanese food at home?▼
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Written by MyCookingCalendar Editorial Team. Published 26 April 2026. Last reviewed 26 April 2026.
Editorial policy: All content is reviewed for accuracy and updated when new evidence emerges. Health articles include a medical disclaimer and are reviewed by qualified professionals.