Anonymous wrote:It seems like the OP is very worried about offending guests
Anonymous wrote:Earlier pp here.
It is of course nice to serve them something from the Middle East but at the same time slightly weird. It's like preparing pasta for someone Italian or cooking Chinese for someone who is Chinese. It's like you go to their home in Riyadh or Jeddah and instead of serving you mix of Saudi or middle eastern dishes, they would serve you hamburgers because you are American.... The PP's situation is slightly different because her husband is Egyptian, so it looks less weird that she's serving middle eastern dishes to her guests.
Especially that you wouldn't be able to get the taste right for many middle eastern dishes anyway unless you know someone who knows how they should taste and can advise you (trust me on this one, as weird as it reads from an anonymous poster. I'd prepare some signature dishes that you'd normally serve.
Anonymous wrote:OMG, I hope you dont offend them. I think you are over thinking this. If the meat had to be halal, I think they would tell you. Just dont serve any pork and you will be just fine.
Frankly, being arab myself, they eat mostly chicken and lamb unless its beef BBQ'd.
What do you plan to cook?
I know a bad ass lamb seasoning - just take the lamb chops and put this on it - you cook it quick on broil in the oven like steak. Same cooking time per same steak thickness - only you serve lamb medium/medium well (little pink):
- Worchestershire sauce
- Olive oil
- McCormick's Lemon Pepper seasoning mix (must be this brand! - has salt in it)
- Rosemary
- Garlic powder
Im syrian, but its a sisiclian recipe that I love. Good luck!
Anonymous wrote:Earlier pp here.
It is of course nice to serve them something from the Middle East but at the same time slightly weird. It's like preparing pasta for someone Italian or cooking Chinese for someone who is Chinese. It's like you go to their home in Riyadh or Jeddah and instead of serving you mix of Saudi or middle eastern dishes, they would serve you hamburgers because you are American.... The PP's situation is slightly different because her husband is Egyptian, so it looks less weird that she's serving middle eastern dishes to her guests.
Especially that you wouldn't be able to get the taste right for many middle eastern dishes anyway unless you know someone who knows how they should taste and can advise you (trust me on this one, as weird as it reads from an anonymous poster. I'd prepare some signature dishes that you'd normally serve.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You mention a different culture. I assumed they were American, but if not,do you know what country they are from?
Saudi Arabia.
Actually I only know for sure that he is from Saudi Arabia, so for now lets assume his wife is too, 5 children oldest is 17, I think some or all were born here. Again I am assuming for now.
They will likely politely decline if they are extremely conservative. But please ask anyway. That is really nice of you.
I'd definitely get meat from a halal butcher shop.
My husband is Egyptian Muslim and we entertain from all over the Arab world., he is NOT religious so he tends to attract like-minded Muslims, of which there are many. Including Saudis. But never assume.
Serve a lot of food, and I like to do a mix of Arab and American dishes, so they can choose safe known favorites or experiment with American.
Thank you for the advice and letting me know they may decline.
Serving a mix of Arab and American dishes sounds like fun and I do like to experiment in the kitchen. Would doing a family style tapas menu work? Lots of little dishes to share? Or more of a sit down menu with courses?
Anonymous wrote:Halal meat is usually very fresh, so if you want to try out a butcher near you, it might be interesting for you. (There won't be pork products.) If you end up serving something like hot dogs for the kids, make sure they're not pork.
Otherwise you should be fine.