Alon Shaya is a James Beard Award-winning chef, restaurateur, cookbook author and television personality known for his unique culinary style that incorporates the food of his Israeli upbringing with flavors and techniques from around the world — from France to New Orleans, to name but a few.
His glitzy new venture, Safta 1964, a culinary residency at the Wynn Las Vegas, has an ambitious menu worthy of the entertainment capital of the world. But the inspiration behind the concept is even more special. Like Shaya’s Denver restaurant, Safta, which he opened in 2018, Safta 1964 is named after his grandmother, whom he credits as his “original culinary muse.” (Safta is grandmother in Hebrew.)
Safta 1964, Shaya told The Nosher, “is a tribute to my grandmother and the types of dinner parties I imagine she might’ve thrown back in her heyday.
“With Safta 1964, we’re traveling back through time, imagining the kind of magical dinner parties that she would have thrown in the 1960s. We’ll be bringing out all my favorite ingredients and some fun tableside touches for the ultimate celebration.”
These fun touches include a tableside Jell-o service, salatim platters and towers of gazoz, a retro carbonated beverage that was popular in the early days of Tel Aviv, before soda was widely available. It’s not a case of style over substance, however. The elevated Israeli comfort food Shaya is known for, largely inspired by his grandmother, is still present.
“Some of my earliest memories of food were in my safta’s kitchen in Jaffa. She would char vegetables to the point of no return, directly on her stovetop, then turn them into lutenitsa and baba ganoush. That aroma was what made me fall in love with food, all those years ago, and it was through my safta that I learned to be patient as the humble eggplant chars over the flames until it becomes smoky and meltingly creamy. Because of that, this was one of the very first things I added to the menu at Safta 1964,” Shaya told The Nosher.
You can find Chef Alon Shaya’s baba ganoush recipe below, and read more about his culinary journey here. (While you’re at it, bookmark his slow-roasted lamb shoulder recipe for the next time you want to wow your dinner guests.)
Recipe courtesy of Alon Shaya, Chef and Co-Founder, Pomegranate Hospitality (New Orleans: Saba, Saba’s Lounge, Miss River and Chandelier Bar at Four Seasons Hotel New Orleans; Denver: Safta; Bahamas: Silan at Atlantis Paradise Island; Las Vegas: Safta 1964 at Wynn Las Vegas); Author, “Shaya: An Odyssey of Food, My Journey Back to Israel”.
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