Anwar Sadat’s menu
Tabaq el-eid — the great shared feast dish

Fatta of the great days

FestiveReconstruction🧂 🍄 🍋moyen3 h

A layered construction: crispy bread at the bottom, rice on top, braised meat, all drizzled with a lively garlic and vinegar broth. The celebration dish, placed in the center of the sofra and shared.

Tabaq el-eid — the great shared feast dish

A layered construction: crispy bread at the bottom, rice on top, braised meat, all drizzled with a lively garlic and vinegar broth. The celebration dish, placed in the center of the sofra and shared.

When Eid came, or a son returned to the village, we didn't skimp: we slaughtered the beast and prepared the fatta. You line the dish with well-toasted stale bread, cover with rice, lay the meat that has simmered for hours, and over it you pour this boiling broth where garlic and vinegar crack like a whip. Each person dips their hand, we break the bread together, and that's where—around the same dish—you measure whether a house is generous. Believe me, a people is known by its feast-day table.
Anwar Sadat
Ingredients
  • Stale flatbreadseveral loaves (crispy base)
  • Ricea good measure (middle layer)
  • Meat (mutton or beef) on the bonea nice piece (festive, broth)
  • Garlicgenerously (signature of the broth)
  • Vinegara splash (sharp acidity)
  • Salt, pepper, cardamomto taste (seasoning)
How it was made : Fatta (from fatt, 'to crumble bread') is a festive dish rooted in rural and urban Egypt, especially associated with Eid al-Adha when the meat of the sacrifice is shared. The hot garlic-vinegar broth poured over bread and rice makes it a celebration dish, in contrast to everyday foul.