Recipes for Success: Chef Mario Zechender in Riyadh offers advice for amateurs, discusses staying calm in the kitchen 

Mario Zechender is the head chef at Carbone Riyadh. (Supplied)
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Updated 23 November 2023
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Recipes for Success: Chef Mario Zechender in Riyadh offers advice for amateurs, discusses staying calm in the kitchen 

DUBAI: Mario Zechender, head chef at Carbone Riyadh, the latest addition to the city’s international imports, has been hard at work over the last few months getting the Italian-American restaurant — a favorite with celebrities in the US — up and running for its new Saudi clientele.   

Raised by his grandmother, who instilled in him a passion for cooking, Zechender attended a culinary arts school in Teano and, after completing his education, moved to the Netherlands, where he worked in several Italian restaurants, including Mirafiori and Casa di David in Amsterdam. He spent five years honing his craft before joining NH Hotels as a chef for three more years.  




Carbone Riyadh is the latest addition to the city’s international imports. (Supplied)

He then returned to Italy, working in various Michelin-starred restaurants, before moving abroad again to work in South America. Following that was a stint in India, after which he moved to the Kingdom this year for Carbone’s October opening.  

The new Riyadh outlet is Carbone’s seventh, along with Hong Kong, Doha, Las Vegas, Miami, Dallas, and the New York original, which opened in 2013 and ranks among the buzziest American restaurants of the last decade.  

Carbone is known for creating a contemporary, celebratory, and highly exclusive dining experience inspired by the storied tradition of the classic mid-19th-century, New York-style Italian restaurant.   




Carbone Spicy Rigatoni. (Supplied)

“I’m at the restaurant before 7 a.m. and we close after 1 a.m. So, I’m living in the kitchen now,” Zechender tells Arab News. “There hasn’t been any time to see the city. But hopefully, once we get into calmer waters, I’ll be able to enjoy the sights and sounds of Riyadh.  

Here, Zechender discusses his management style, his favorite Chilean dish, and how customers can annoy him.   

Q: What’s your top tip for amateur chefs?   

A: Just improve yourself and keep working on your skills at home, like chopping vegetables and your skills with kitchen knives.  

What one ingredient can instantly improve any dish?  

For me, it’s fresh herbs and citrus peels. For example, if you’re making tomato sauce, if you just add some basil leaves, you’ll really improve the flavor, freshness and aroma of the sauce.  




Meatballs. (Supplied)

When you go out to eat, do you find yourself critiquing the food?   

When I go out, I try just to enjoy the experience. I don’t like to criticize the chef, because each chef is different and has different techniques. If something bad were to happen, I just wouldn’t go back to the restaurant. But I wouldn’t complain to the chef, because he’s got his own technique.  

When you go out to eat, what’s your favorite cuisine? 

I really enjoy Mexican food because they don’t use too many ingredients but they’re always fresh ingredients.    




Caesar alla ZZ - Carbone. (Supplied)

 

What’s your go-to dish if you have to cook something quickly at home, say in 20 minutes?  

When I want to cook something quick, it’s usually pasta with some simple, fresh ingredients. That takes me less than 10 minutes.  

What request/behavior by customers most annoys you?  

For me, as an Italian, I get annoyed when customers ask for ‘well-done’ pasta. Pasta is meant to be eaten al dente.   

What are you like in the kitchen? Are you a disciplinarian or are you more laidback?  

I’m definitely more laidback in the kitchen. Because, for the chefs, it’s very tough, so I like to be calm. After the service, we normally do a short briefing. And if someone made a mistake, then that’s when I would correct them — once the service is finished. 


Emirati actress Meera AlMidfa reflects on Cannes and her first feature-length film, co-starring Saudi actor Fahad Al-Butairi

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Emirati actress Meera AlMidfa reflects on Cannes and her first feature-length film, co-starring Saudi actor Fahad Al-Butairi

DUBAI: Emirati actress and filmmaker Meera AlMidfa has two short films screening at the ongoing Cannes Film Festival — “Shame” and “Umm Salama The Matchmaker”. Both provide sharp insight and commentary on Arab womanhood, while approaching the subject from separate viewpoints and taking a different tone.

While in “Shame” AlMidfa plays a woman whose attempt to flee from home is abruptly halted when her mother catches her and leads to an intense confrontation, in “Umm Salama The Matchmaker,” she plays the daughter of a matchmaker trying to avoid getting hitched.

Meera AlMidfa (right) in “Umm Salama The Matchmaker”. (Supplied)

“The two films were made as part of Arab Film Studio workshop by Image Nation Abu Dhabi. And I was cast by the filmmakers who were doing the filmmaking course, both female directors. And they both explore similar issues about women and marriage,” AlMidfa said in an interview with Arab News.

However, AlMidfa is most excited about her first full-length feature, “Al Eid Eiden,” Image Nation Abu Dhabi’s Saudi-Emirati family comedy. “I play an Emirati woman married to a Saudi man,” said AlMidfa.

Starring opposite AlMidfa is Saudi actor Fahad Al-Butairi (“Telfaz11,” “The Office,” “From A to B”), with the film’s worldwide release planned for July 4.

Meera AlMidfa will soon star in her first full-length feature, “Al Eid Eiden,” Image Nation Abu Dhabi’s Saudi-Emirati family comedy. (Supplied)

The production brings together an all-female Emirati creative team featuring first feature director Maitha Alawadi, producer Rawia Abdullah and writer Sara Al-Sayegh.

The film’s logline reads, “‘Al Eid Eiden’ follows a Saudi-Emirati family as they make the final preparations for an Eid getaway in Abu Dhabi. An unexpected turn of events on their day of travel changes things drastically for the parents, but not wanting to disappoint their three young children, they decide to go ahead as planned.

“What ensues is a roller-coaster ride of comedic mishaps and misunderstandings as they hurtle through uncharted parenting territory, a theme park, and Eid gatherings with relatives. Through the chaos, they discover unity as a family.”

Having been an integral part of the theatre and acting scene for more than a decade in the UAE, AlMidfa — who has a master’s degree in film directing from the American Film Institute — is also interested in working behind the camera as much as she is performing in front of it.

“I would say acting comes more naturally to me. But the more I do production work, the more it sinks in as well. But it’s like a complete personality switch. So, you need to kind of figure out how to balance yourself when you switch from one to the other based on the project. So, I don’t mix them up too much — I don’t direct something and then act like back-to-back,” she said.


Review: Cannes title ‘Everybody Loves Touda’ is a sparkling example of Nabil Ayouch’s work

Updated 57 min 16 sec ago
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Review: Cannes title ‘Everybody Loves Touda’ is a sparkling example of Nabil Ayouch’s work

CANNES: Directed by Morocco’s Nabil Ayouch, Cannes Film Festival title “Everybody Loves Touda” is a compelling look at a single mother, Touda (an excellent Nisrin Erradi), who lives by the age-old dictum “never say die.”

Living in a small town, she is a bundle of music and mirth and her dances seem to bring cheer to her audience, but she soon faces unwanted attention.

The Cannes screening ended with a standing ovation, and Ayouch’s fourth outing at the festival seemed to garner far more audience appreciation than in earlier years. In 2012, his critically acclaimed drama “Horses of God” played in the Un Certain Regard section, which is second in importance to the main competition and is widely seen as a platform for experimental cinema. But Ayouch has also played in the In Competition section for the coveted Palme d’Or — his 2021 feature “Casablanca Beats,” the first title from Morocco since 1962 to vie for this honor, proved a sensation.

 Maryam Touzani and Nabil Ayouch attend the "Everybody Loves Touda" Photocall at the 77th annual Cannes Film Festival. (Getty Images)

Like his other movies, Ayouch approaches “Everybody Loves Touda” with fascinating realism that at times may appear a little too harsh. Having written the script with Mayam Touzani (“The Blue Caftan”), Ayouch may have given us formulaic fare, but he infuses Touda with a kind of determination that is awesome. Striving to relocate to Casablanca, where her deaf son would have better schooling and she herself could find greater opportunities, Touda begins to sing in village nightclubs, bearing with a grin the lecherous gaze of men drunk with delusion.

This is not the first time that Ayouch puts women in such precarious positions. His 2008 “Whatever Lola Wants” talks about the trials of a postal worker in New York who dreams of becoming an Egyptian belly dancer, and “Much Loved” (which played at in the Director's Fortnight section) created a storm with its exploration of prostitution in Morocco.

Peppered with lively music (by Flemming Nordkrog), Touda croons folkloric songs on liberation and other forms of women’s rights. The actress’s gripping performance causes the narrative to sparkle —Erradi has a remarkable on-screen presence that makes the movie a joy to watch.


Lebanese designer Georges Chakra puts on a show at the Cannes Film Festival

Updated 54 min 19 sec ago
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Lebanese designer Georges Chakra puts on a show at the Cannes Film Festival

DUBAI: Lebanese designer Georges Chakra is making a splash at the ongoing 77th Cannes Film Festival and has so far dressed a number of stars on the red carpet.

Australian actress Claire Holt hit the red carpet before the premiere of Kevin Costner’s “Horizon: An American Saga” in an all-white gown by the designer.

The Georges Chakra Couture look was created from white satin and chiffon and featured pleated detailing across the hips and a dramatic chiffon shoulder train. The look hailed from the designer’s Spring/Summer 2024 collection.

Meanwhile, Tunisian actress Dorra Zarrouk attended the “Women in Cinema” gala dinner hosted by Saudi Arabia’s Red Sea Film Festival in a white satin bustier gown with a satin cape encrusted with hand painted gold feathers from the label’s Fall/Winter 2023-2024 line.

Dorra Zarrouk in Georges Chakra. (Getty Images)

Finally, Chinese actress and model Crystal Zhang chose a Georges Chakra Couture gold sequined gown with a draped veil from the Spring/Summer 2024 collection to attend the Marie Claire China event which took place on the sidelines of the festival.

Holt showed off her choice at the premiere of Costner’s latest film on Sunday. “Horizon: An American Saga” sees the director return to his favorite Western genre with a three-hour film that is just the first of four mooted chapters.

Costner put millions of dollars of his own fortune into the decades-long passion project.

“At a certain moment I just said OK, I'm going to do this myself. And so I mortgaged property, I raised the money,” he told AFP at the festival.

The early reviews were mixed, with The Hollywood Reporter deriding it as a “clumsy slog” while British newspaper The Telegraph said it was “earnest yet hopeful... (and) perhaps its full grandeur won't be fully realized until part two.”

Costner says he is unconcerned about risking his money.

“If they take it away from me, I still have my movie. I still have my integrity. I still listened to my heart,” he said.

 


US comedian Jerry Seinfeld heckled by Pro-Palestinian supporter at standup show in Virginia

Updated 20 May 2024
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US comedian Jerry Seinfeld heckled by Pro-Palestinian supporter at standup show in Virginia

DUBAI: Pro-Palestine protests disrupted US comedian-actor Jerry Seinfeld’s Saturday night comedy set in Norfolk, Virginia, resulting in one protestor being escorted out of the venue.

Seinfeld has been vocal in his support for Israel following Hamas’s Oct. 7 attack. The comedian also met with families of the hostages and visited a kibbutz during a trip to Israel in December.

In videos posted online, Seinfeld’s show can be seen being interrupted by a man who stood in the crowd and yelled toward the comedian that he was “a genocide supporter.”

Another video posted to Instagram shows the individual yelling, “Save the children of Gaza,” “No more American tax dollars for genocide” and “You should be ashamed of yourself.”

Seinfeld responded to the heckler, later joking, “This is exciting. I like this.”

Last week, several students walked out of Duke University’s commencement ceremony to protest Seinfeld speaking at the event.


‘Goodbye Julia’ wins big at Critics Awards for Arab Films in Cannes

Updated 19 May 2024
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‘Goodbye Julia’ wins big at Critics Awards for Arab Films in Cannes

DUBAI: Sudanese first-time director Mohamed Kordofani’s “Goodbye Julia” won the best feature film and best screenplay awards at the eighth Critics Awards for Arab Films that took place on the sidelines of the Cannes Film Festival on Saturday.

French-Tunisian composer Amin Bouhafa, who worked on “Hajjan,” won the best music award for the Saudi Arabia-based film. 

Tunisian director Kaouther Ben Hania’s hybrid docudrama “Four Daughters,” which missed out on the Best Documentary win at this year’s Academy Awards, scored three prizes: Best director for Ben Hania, best documentary and best editing.

Amjad Al-Rasheed’s “Inshallah a Boy” picked up the best actress prize for Palestinian star Mouna Hawa and best cinematography for Kanamé Onoyama.

Palestinian actor Saleh Bakri nabbed the best actor prize for his role in “The Teacher” while Egyptian filmmaker Morad Mostafa’s “I Promise You Paradise” came out on top in the best short film category.

The awards ceremony is organized by the Cairo-based Arab Cinema Centre (ACC) and winners are voted on by 225 critics from more than 70 countries.