LEBANON 🇱🇧
COVID-19 UPDATE: Takeout only, which isn’t much of a change from their usual business
model. Online ordering is available at lebaneseeatery.com, and will reduce wait times.
EDITOR'S NOTE: Written by Joseph Gessert, photographed by Liv Dillon.
Until last year Lebanese Eatery was a lunch counter tucked in the back of a bustling
supermarket. The market is now gone, but thankfully the eatery remains, serving some of Staten Island’s
most well-executed Middle Eastern food.
All of the usual Lebanese mezzeh are on offer, and everything is excellent, but extra love is put
into the baked goods. Mini lamb pies ($1.50) are seasoned with red pepper and yoghurt, while
chicken pies (also $1.50) are flavored more mildly. Large meat pies (beef, $3.50) are a meal in
themselves. All are best supplemented with a side of toum for dipping ($4.50 large). Toum is the
Lebanese cousin to aioli, an emulsion of garlic, oil, and lemon juice. The emphasis is on the
garlic, and on Lebanese Eatery’s menu as on many US menus, it is sold as “garlic sauce.”
Also great with toum is stuffed squash ($2.99). The skill of Lebanese Eatery’s
kitchen is evident in the barely-there thinness of the squash, which has been meticulously
hollowed out and filled with a blend of rice and spices, then cooked in a tomato broth. As with
other Lebanese restaurants, vegetarians and vegans can eat well here. However, the main
business at Lebanese Eatery is in meat, and their meat shawarma ($9.99 for a wrap) combines
beef and lamb off the spit with perfect proportions of pickle, veggie, and bread.
Nearby Todt Hill is home to a well-established Palestinian community, and Lebanese Eatery
branches out into some Palestinian dishes as well as their Lebanese mainstays. Chicken
maqluba (“upside-down,” the one-pot rice dish that is Palestine’s national dish) is an occasional
special, but was not on offer during a recent weekday visit. Also available is kunafa ($4.50), the
baked filo-and-cheese dessert that is omnipresent in the West Bank and served in volume at
Bay Ridge’s Nablus Sweets. Other Palestinian dishes are available on Lebanese Eatery’s
catering menu and as occasional specials.
There is nothing revolutionary happening here menu-wise, but it is all done really well, and
served with obvious pride by a familial staff. As the menu states, “all food homemade by chef
(mom),” and her cooking is definitely worth a trip out of your way. And then again, perhaps in a
borough that’s been so hostile at times to immigrants, proudly serving authentic food from far
away is revolutionary in itself. Regardless, the cooking
is fantastic, and worth a trip from anywhere.
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