Feasts From the Middle East
By (Author) Comptoir Libanais
By (author) Tony Kitous
HarperCollins Publishers
HQ
19th March 2018
8th March 2018
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
General cookery and recipes
641.595692
Hardback
256
Width 195mm, Height 252mm, Spine 22mm
980g
A celebration of authentic Middle Eastern food, Feasts from the Middle East is packed with over 100 deliciously fresh, fragrant and flavourful dishes, inspired by the souks of Lebanon.
- Fast, fresh, affordable and delicious Middle Eastern food for the mass market from one of the fastest-growing, most exciting Lebanese restaurant brands in the UK.
- With Feasts from the Middle East, we want to recreate the excitement and buzz of the Wagamama and Leon cookbooks, and use a growing, cool restaurant brand to create a cookery bestseller.
- Comptoir Libanais are expanding their brand outside of London to include branches in Manchester, Bath, Leeds, Reading, Oxford and Exeter. They will have 30 restaurants by the time the book releases.
- The founder of Comptoir Libanais, Tony Kitous, is a fantastic ambassador for the brand with bags of authenticity, drive and passion, and an extraordinary backstory: arriving in London aged 18 with just 70 in his pocket, he now employs 1,000 people in the UK.
Praise for Comptoir Libanais:
Tony Kitous, the man credited with glamourising middle eastern food. THE INDEPENDENT
Pippa Middletons favourite restaurant.
DAILY MAIL
Bringing mezze to the masses[Comptoir Libanais] has Eastern allurenot to be missed.
EVENING STANDARD
Famous customers range from Prince William and Pippa Middleton to David Cameron. Music legends such as Paul McCartney, Bjork and Robert Plant have also dined in Kitouss restaurants, while footballers who visit include former Arsenal and France star Thierry Henry, and inevitably numerous Arab players based in the UK, such as Watford and Algeria midfielder Adlene Guedioura.
TELEGRAPH
Tony Kitous arrived in London for the first time on August 6, 1988, aged 18. The self-styled Algerian "street boy" had just GBP70 in his pocket and was meant to be on holiday with a school friend, but instead, he spent his first night in Victoria coach station, and lived off chocolate for the for the first fortnight. More than 29 years later, the owner of the Comptoir Libanais canteen and delicatessen chain has 24 branches in London and across the UK, and employs 1,000 staff. They are part of a restaurant empire that encompasses three Shawa - Lebanese grill outlets, as well as Levant on Wigmore Street and Kenza in the city of London.