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Monthly Archives: September 2007

Israeli Culinary

Israeli_Culinary

A Delicious Melting Pot

If Israel is a culinary superpower, Tel Aviv is its Capital. Between the falafel stands and the gourmet restaurants that earn multiple forks in the Gault ? Millau guide ? not to mention a wide spectrum of Chinese, Italian, seafood and meat restaurants ? a unique culinary culture has blossomed, unmatched by any other food mecca.

“Jewish” Food

There are restaurants, that is, with an Eastern European flavor, serving kugel, cholent and gefilte fish with lots of chrain. At Shaked, Keton and Mul Eden in central Tel Aviv, they’ll be happy to bring you some chopped liver, too.

Arab food

And what’s the difference between a Middle Eastern restaurant and an Arab one? Good question. The menu of a typical Israel Middle Eastern place focuses on hummus, fresh vegetable salad and grilled meats, while Arab restaurants generally add to that a variety of stuffed vegetables and bigger selection of salads.

The Arab restaurants in Jaffa, like the well-known Raouf & Atina, also serve fish and fish and seafood. The service in both the Middle Eastern restaurant and the Arab restaurant is quick and efficient, and prices are very reasonable.

North African food

A wide swathe of the Israeli population hails from North Africa, whose cuisine features couscous, hraimeh, matbuha, shakshuka and stuff vegetables. At both Asraf and Giuliani in central Tel Aviv, and Dr. Shakshouka in Jaffa, you can get truly authentic North African dishes. If this cooking style made a big impact on French cuisine, it’s no wonder that we find it so exciting.

Persian food

The Persian specialties at Keshet in the old centrel bus station area and Nayef on Zebulun Street include authentic treats such as gondi, sevzi, leppe, and shefteh.

You’ll also want to savor a stew of vegetables and meat with Persian lemon, or maash, a soup combining pomegranate, beets, vegetables and rice.

Gourmet

Top restaurants in the Israeli genre feature lots of super ? fresh locally grown vegetables. The chefs create superb seasonal dishes based on highest quality ingredients from the market, such as okra, Jerusalem artichokes, green beans, ful and leeks, using French techniques with local touches (that is, Arab, Middle Eastern and Balkan). This is the custom at Carmela baNachala ( a sister restaurant to the famous Uri Burri in Acre), at inventive chef Nir Zook’s Cordelia in Jaffa, at Rafael’s under wonder-chef Rafi Cohen, at the breathtaking Messa, at Tahel which adds a Spanish flavor to all this, and at the prestigious seafood restaurant Moul Yam. All of these places are renowned not only for their innovative and exacting chefs, but also for their outstanding dacor and professional service, with an Israeli touch.

Haifa Film Festival 2007

Haifa International Film Festival The Haifa International Film Festival is held each year during the holiday of Succoth on the ridge of Mount Carmel overlooking the Mediterranean Sea. The Festival was founded in 1983 and was the first of its kind in Israel. Over the years, the Festival became the biggest and most important film celebration in Israel.
The Haifa International Film Festival brings together each year an ever-growing audience of 60,000 spectators along with hundreds of Israeli and foreign professionals from the film and television industries. 180,000 people in total take part in the activities of the festival, including the outdoor events, screenings, workshops and more, and dozens of journalists from both the print and broadcast media, from Israel and abroad, cover the event.
During its eight days of celebration, the Festival proudly premieres 150 new films from the best and most recent international productions and holds 220 screenings in seven theaters and under the sky: feature films, documentaries, animation, short films, retrospectives and tributes.
Festival Program:
Gala screenings - the biggest film productions from Hollywood and Europe are premiered at the Festival before moving on to commercial distribution.
Panorama - the very best films world cinema has to offer; films that have won enthusiastic reviews and awards at international Festivals over the past two years and are not intended from commercial distribution in Israel.
Israeli Film Competition - new Israeli films that are competing for awards in a number of categories: feature films, documentary films, TV dramas, animation and student films.
The Golden Anchor Competition for Mediterranean Cinema - a competition of quality productions from Mediterranean countries.
The Fipresci Competitionfor new directors
Doc-Talks - American Documentaries with an introduction before each film.
Retrospectives and tributes - this category promotes filmmakers and themes that celebrate the history of filmmaking and its milestones
New German Cinema - The Latest and the best of the German Productions
East of the West - Cinema from Eastern Europe
The Festival’s Board of Directors is composed of film and culture professionals and members of the public.
Each year the Festival enjoys the support of the City of Haifa, the Ministry of Education, Science and Sport - the Israeli Film Council, and the European Union. It is also sponsored by commercial companies.

You can visit the official site of Haifa Festival Film here.

Tel Aviv Pictures - The Most Beautiful Neighborhood In Tel-Aviv!

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The Neve Tzedek neighborhood of Tel Aviv was the first Jewish neighborhood to be built outside of Jaffa at the beginning of 1887, 22 years before the establishment of the City of Tel Aviv. With the passing of the years, Neve Tzedek has become a center of taste, culture and lifestyle and a desirable area to live in. Many intellectuals and artists chose to dwell and to create here.

Neve Tzedek is a neighborhood in south-west Tel Aviv. It was the first Jewish neighborhood to be built outside the walls of the ancient port of Jaffa. For years, the neighborhood prospered as Tel Aviv, the first modern Hebrew city, grew up around it. Years of neglect and disrepair followed, but today Neve Tzedek has become one of Tel Aviv’s latest fashionable districts.

Neve Tzedek was established in 1887, 22 years before the 1909 founding of the City of Tel Aviv, by a group of Jewish families seeking a more peaceful life outside of the Jaffa’s teeming streets. Other neighborhoods sprung up around Neve Tzedek, which were incorporated into the contemporary boundaries of the neighborhood.

The residents constructed mostly colorful, short buildings along narrow streets. Residents’ homes featured many contemporary luxuries like private bathrooms and kitchens.

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At the beginning of the 1900s, many artists and writers made Neve Tzedek their residence. Most notably, Nobel prize laureate Shmuel Yosef Agnon, as well as Hebrew artist Nahum Gutman, used Neve Tzedek as both a home and a sanctuary for art.

As time went on, its buildings abandoned or neglected, fell into disrepair. By the 1960s, city officials deemed Neve Tzedek incompatible with bustling Tel Aviv. However, their plan to demolish the historic neighborhood to make way for high rise structures was ultimately cancelled as many Neve Tzedek buildings were placed on preservation lists. The old, worn-out neighborhood became a patch of the pastoral amidst the greater urban center.

But by the end of the 1980s, efforts began to renovate and preserve Neve Tzedek’s century-old structures. New establishments were housed in old buildings, most notably to the Suzanne Dalal Dance and Theater Center and the Nahum Gutman Museum, located in the artist’s home.

The well-needed gentrification led to Neve Tzedek’s rebirth as a fashionable and popular residence for Tel Avivians. Its main streets became lined once again with artists’ studios, alongside trendy cafés and bars. The Tel Aviv Subway, which is expected to pass near Neve Tzedek, will make the neighborhood even more accessible for visitors and residents alike.

A tour of the narrow lanes and winding streets of the neighborhood is a fabulous experience. The area has been renovated and each corner is a gem. Amongst others, you can find here the house of the Hebrew Nobel Literature prizewinning author, Shai Agnon, who lived here from 1909 to 1912. At the corner of Pines and Lilienblum Streets is a building colored pink and yellow, which served as the first cinema in Tel Aviv. This is the “Eden” cinema, which began in 1914 by screening the silent film, “The Last Days of Pompei”.

One of the most interesting spots in Neve Tzedek is the Suzanne Dellal center, which was built in 1908 as a girls’ school and became one of the most important of Tel Aviv’s theatrical and cultural centers. Also in the neighborhood - the Gutman Museum, the home of the artist Nachum Gutman, displaying his works, photographs and video films, and that of the Rokach family, pioneers of the area, which has become a museum and memorial, showing a variety of objects, as well as an exhibition of the artist, Leah Majero-Mintz, who renovated the house.

Above the neighborhood is the Shalom Tower, one of the high buildings of Tel Aviv, and its observation balcony, from which there is a fine view of Neve Tzedek, the hill of Jaffa and the Mediterranean Sea.

For more information About Tel Aviv, please visit your local site in the following links:

USA: http://www.visit-tlv.co.il/usa/minisite5.html?utm_source=web2

UK And Europe: http://www.visit-tlv.co.il/eng.html?utm_source=web2&utm_medium=link

German Language: http://www.visit-tlv.co.il/ger/ger.html?utm_source=web2&utm_medium=link

 

Israel In Tennis Elite - Qualified To The World Group 2008!

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Israel wins epic tie to claim World Group spot Dudi Sela was Israel’s hero again as he defeated Fernando Gonzalez 4:6 7:6(5) 5:7 7:6(7) 6:3 in a nail biting contest lasting one minute over five hours, to give Israel an unassailable 3-1 lead in this Davis Cup by BNP Paribas World Group Play-off tie against Chile.

That means that Israel will line up in the World Group in 2008 for the first time since 1994- and the nation’s women will also be in Fed Cup by BNP Paribas World Group I next year.

Sela, ranked 105, produced an astonishing upset in defeating world No. 6 Fernando Gonzalez on Sunday. It was another extraordinary event in a World Group tie that saw a dramatic first day end level at 1-1, followed by an epic doubles on Saturday that Jonathan Erlich and Andy Ram edged 10-8 in the fifth set over Gonzalez and Nicolas Massu. It was a weekend that proved again that Davis Cup has its own rules.

The Israeli national tennis team assured its place in the Davis Cup’s World Group this Sunday, for the first time since 1994.says YNET the Israeli New Portal.

For three days the team gave its all, with the shortest match ? Noam Okun versus Fernando Gonzalez ? taking some three and a half hours.

The Israeli tennis team demonstrated maturity, determination and an overall joie de vivre, giving the audience ? which was more than happy to cheer them on ? much pleasure. The Israeli tennis team demonstrated maturity, determination and an overall joie de vivre, giving the audience ? which was more than happy to cheer them on ? much pleasure.

Supported by the outpour of love from the bleachers, the team was able to perform on a level rarely seen before by the Israeli delegates to the Davis Cup.

The Israeli Coach Avram Grant Set To Take Over Chelsea?

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The BBC reports today that The Israeli, who was the club’s director of football, will take charge alongside assistant Steve Clarke.

“The club is delighted in Avram we have an experienced man who can come in at a difficult time,” said a club statement. The statement comes after BBC Sport’s Garry Richardson revealed the former Israel coach would be handed the management reins at the Blues.

Avraham “Avram” Grant is an Israeli football coach. Once coach of both Maccabi Tel Aviv (twice, from 1991-1995 and less successfully from 1997-2000) and Maccabi Haifa (2000-2002), Grant was formerly the national team coach of Israel, taking the position in May 2002 when he replaced Dane Richard Møller Nielsen. Israel finished third in 2006 World Cup qualifying Group 4 behind winners France and runners-up Switzerland.

This meant that Israel marginally missed on qualification to the finals, despite being undefeated in the group - with four wins and six draws. He announced on 26 October 2005 that he would step down from the national team as his contract expires in June 2006. Subsequent to this he took up his new position as Technical Director at Portsmouth. A personal friend of Roman Abramovich, on 8 July 2007 he was appointed Director of Football at Chelsea. (From Wikipedia)

The Israeli Coach David Blatt Beat The world champions Spain In The Eurobasket Final!

Amazing achievement for David Blatt, the Israeli coach of Russia, who beat the world Champion’s Spain in the final of the EuroBasket yesterday in Madrid!

Yarone Arbel at the official web site of the Eurobasket 2007 wrote today that Any coach can take over a new team and change the X’s and O’s, the style of play, teach a new defense or pick new players.

The big challenge isn’t to be able to change the team tactically, but to change the mentality, the character. When you find a coach who can do that, you know you’ve found something special. David Blatt has led a Russian team to the 2007 EuroBasket finals for the first time since 1993 and in the process has changed the public’s perception of them and their perception of themselves.

It’s a story about a connection in many layers that starts in basketball but goes beyond it.

To read the full article please click here.

From Wikipedia:

David Blatt (born 22 May 1959 in Boston, Massachusetts) is an Israeli-American present day basketball coach and a former basketball point guard. Today he is one of the most successful Israeli and European basketball coaches in European basketball and is the head coach for the Turkish Efes Pilsen Basketball Team.

Blatt played basketball at Princeton University from 1977 to 1981 under coach Pete Carril. He participated in the Maccabiah Games as part of the USA national team that won a gold medal in 1981.

After competing in the Maccabiah Games, Blatt decided to abandon his American career and began to play basketball in Israel.

After retiring from basketball he became assistant manager for Hapoel Galil Elyon, coaching them from 1993/94 season. In the middle of the season the head caoch was sacked and he took his place. Next, he became Pini Gershon’s assistant in the 1994/95 season. In the following year he won the title “Coach of the Year” (1996) and in 1997 he continued coaching at Hapoel Galil Elyon whilst also becoming assistant coach of the Israeli National team.

Blatt returned to coach Galil Elyon and remained assistant manager of the Israeli National team for the next 2 year (1997-1999).

For the 1999/2000 season, he moved to Maccabi Tel Aviv and once again served as assistant manager to Pini Gershon. During this season his team took part in the Israeli League and Cup (won both) and also in the Euroleague where Maccabi finished in 2nd place.

In the years between 2000-2004 he continued as assistant coach under Pini Gershon and actively recruited foreign players such as Anthony Parker (in 2000) and Maceo Baston to the team. During those 4 years, Maccabi won 1 Euroleague title, reached the Euroleague Final Four (2001/2002 season), and reached the final stage of the Adriatic League. Maccabi won the SuproLeague title in 2001, which was held in Paris. Blatt was still working as assistant coach of the Israeli National team in 2002 when he won the title of “Coach of the Year” for the second time, the year he was appointed head coach of Maccabi Tel Aviv .

In 2004 he moved to Russia and signed as head coach with Dynamo St. Petersburg. During this year he won the FIBA EuroCup championship with Dynamo and also the title of “Coach of the Year in Russia” (2004/2005 season).

During the 2005/2006 season he was signed by Pallacanestro Treviso from Italy, and subsequently led them to the Italian Championship through a 3-1 victory in the final series of the Italian playoffs. In the same year he was also appointed head coach of the Russian National team.

Blatt is now the head coach of Istanbul based Turkish team Efes Pilsen, as well as the Russian national basketball team, with which he won Eurobasket 2007 in Madrid.

AJAXed with AWP