Ordering in with Lugmety: Jeddah's Ahel Awal & Ms Moh Bakery

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Ahel Awal offers up a variety of Middle Eastern fare. (Supplied)
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Ms Moh Bakery offers up a variety of sweet treats. (Supplied)
Updated 02 June 2019
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Ordering in with Lugmety: Jeddah's Ahel Awal & Ms Moh Bakery

  • Ahel Awal is a fairly new restaurant in Jeddah
  • The dessert was from Ms. Moh Bakery

JEDDAH: Ramadan is a month of reflection and giving, a month where families gather and reconnect over a table full of wonderful traditional dishes. Families gather regularly and since it’s customary to bring a dish to the household you’re visiting, food delivery apps often save the day.

For my weekly family gathering, I scrolled through food delivery app Lugmety, which operates in Jeddah and Riyadh.

My cousins were craving samboosak, a staple on every Hijazi table.  My grandmother’s pastries were like no other, but it’s time for us young ones to make up for all the years that she hid a big batch of samboosak away from our parents.

I ordered from Ahel Awal, a restaurant that is quite new to the restaurant scene in Jeddah.  It serves dishes often found on tables in the Hijazi region, such as fuul, okra stew and mulukhiya stew, but I needed my pastry fix.

I chose the madini puff and the samboosa sajair, but unfortunately the other options were not available at the time, which was rather disappointing.

Nevertheless, the order arrived piping hot just a few minutes before iftar and had the perfect crunch we were all craving. The fluffy samboosaks, complete with crumbly pastry, were stuffed with just the right amount of tender, well-seasoned meat and served with various chutneys, including a sweet and tangy tamarind sauce.

On to dessert and I broke Ramadan dessert protocol by ordering a banoffee pie from Ms. Moh Bakery.

Although the café does offer a wide of sweets — including Arabic desserts with a twist, cakes, pies, puddings and trifles — the banoffee pie called my name.

It was fantastic, with just the right amount of fluffy cream over a light biscuit crust and perfectly aligned fresh bananas drizzled in a thick caramel sauce. 

It’s been a while since I’ve tasted a great banoffee pie and this one topped the charts and even scored fans in my traditional Arabic dessert-loving family. 


Saja Kilani shines at BAFTAs 2026

Updated 23 February 2026
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Saja Kilani shines at BAFTAs 2026

DUBAI: Palestinian-Jordanian-Canadian actress Saja Kilani, one of the stars of “The Voice of Hind Rajab,” stepped onto the BAFTA Film Awards 2026 red carpet in a sculptural look from Bottega Veneta’s Spring 2026 collection.

Nominated for Best Film Not in the English Language, Kaouther Ben Hania’s “Voice of Hind Rajab” tells the story of Hind Rajab Hamada, who was fleeing the Israeli military in Gaza City with six relatives last year when their car came under fire.

The sole survivor of the Israeli attack, who was then shot and killed, her desperate calls recorded with the Red Crescent rescue service caused international outrage.

Kilani plays Rana Faqih, the real-life Palestine Red Crescent Society volunteer who spoke to Hamada in the final hours of her life as she waited, surrounded by the bodies of her family, for help to come. 

Meanwhile, politically charged thriller “One Battle After Another” won six prizes, including Best Picture, at the British Academy Film Awards on Sunday, building momentum ahead of Hollywood’s Academy Awards next month.

Blues-steeped vampire epic “Sinners” and gothic horror story “Frankenstein” won three awards each, while Shakespearean family tragedy “Hamnet” won two, including Best British Film.

“One Battle After Another,” Paul Thomas Anderson’s explosive film about a group of revolutionaries in chaotic conflict with the state, won awards for directing, adapted screenplay, cinematography and editing, as well as for Sean Penn’s supporting performance as an obsessed military officer.

“This is very overwhelming and wonderful,” Anderson said as he accepted the directing prize. He paid tribute to his longstanding assistant director, Adam Somner, who died of cancer in November 2024, a few weeks into production.

“We have a line from Nina Simone that we used in our film, ‘I know what freedom is: It’s no fear,’” the director said. “Let’s keep making things without fear. It’s a good idea.”

Bookies’ favorite Jessie Buckley won the Best Actress prize for her portrayal of grieving mother Agnes Hathaway, wife of William Shakespeare, in “Hamnet.” Buckley, 36, is the first Irish performer to win the Best Actress prize at the awards.

She dedicated her award “to the women past, present and future who taught me and continue to teach me how to do it differently.”

Horror film “Sinners” took home trophies for director Ryan Coogler’s original screenplay, the film’s musical score and for Wunmi Mosaku’s supporting actress performance as herbalist and healer Annie.

The British-Nigerian actor said that in the role she found “a part of my hopes, my ancestral power and my connection, parts I thought I had lost or tried to dim as an immigrant trying to fit in.”