Recipes for Success: Chef Aljawharah Al-Salem offers advice and a cereal bar recipe 

Chef Aljawharah’s nut and spice cereal bars. (Supplied)
Short Url
Updated 09 January 2026
Follow

Recipes for Success: Chef Aljawharah Al-Salem offers advice and a cereal bar recipe 

DUBAI: At Kimpton KAFD Riyadh, pastry chef and chocolatier Aljawharah Al-Salem is hoping to contribute to a new chapter in Saudi Arabia’s evolving culinary story. One of the Kingdom’s most promising pastry talents, Al-Salem studied at Ecole Ducasse — Ecole Nationale Superieure de Patisserie in France and George Brown College in Toronto. 

She has honed her expertise in French pastry and chocolate in kitchens including Le Meurice in Paris, Hotel X Toronto, and Richmond Station. Today, Al-Salem channels that experience into innovative chocolate creations at Kimpton KAFD Riyadh. 




Aljawharah Al-Salem is a pastry chef and chocolatier. (Supplied)

“Our menus are designed to celebrate Saudi flavors while presenting them in a modern, refined way,” Al-Salem tells Arab News. “We wanted to create dishes that feel familiar to locals but also surprise international guests. You’ll find traditional ingredients like dates, saffron, cardamom, and local honey, but paired with global techniques and presentations. It’s a balance between heritage and innovation.” 

When asked about her favorite dish on the menu, she said: “My favorite is the Saudi Tiramisu. It’s close to my heart because it tells the story of Saudi hospitality on a plate. Every time I prepare it, I feel I’m honoring my roots but also pushing boundaries in how Saudi cuisine can be presented.” 

Here, she discusses her love for olive oil and fatty burgers, and shares a recipe for nut and spice cereal bars. 

When you started out, what was the most common mistake you made? 

Rushing the process. In the beginning, I wanted everything to be perfect and fast, but great food takes patience. Whether it’s proofing dough or tempering chocolate, time is often the secret ingredient. 

What’s your top tip for amateur chefs? 

Don’t be afraid to experiment. Recipes are guidelines, not rules. Start with fresh ingredients, taste as you go, and enjoy the process rather than worrying about the result — especially if you have tiny hands helping you in the kitchen. Cooking together makes the food taste even better. 




Ziya Lounge - Kimpton KAFD Riyadh. (Supplied)

What one ingredient can instantly improve any dish?  

Good quality olive oil. It adds depth, richness, and balance whether you’re cooking or finishing a dish. For us, in the region, olive oil carries cultural as well as nutritional value.   

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

It’s impossible not to notice details, but I try to focus on the overall experience rather than just picking faults.  

And what’s the most common issue you find in other restaurants? 

The most common issue I notice isn’t about flavor; it's about consistency. A dish might be great one day and average the next. Consistency is the true test of a kitchen. 

What’s your favorite cuisine or dish to order? 

As much as I admire fine cuisine, after a long shift nothing hits the spot like a fatty smash burger. It’s the kind of food that doesn’t require perfection, it just delivers pure comfort, and that’s exactly what a chef craves after hours of precision in the kitchen. 

What’s your go-to dish if you have to cook something quickly at home? 

If I need a quick meal, I go for a one-pot pasta — sorry, Italians! It’s fast, comforting, and feeds the whole family. 

What customer request or behavior most annoys you? 

I wouldn’t say it annoys me, but sometimes people come in with a closed mindset — wanting things only the way they know them. I believe part of dining out is trusting the chef and being open to new flavors and experiences. Life is too short to only stick to what you know. 

What’s your favorite dish to cook and why? 

I love cooking saleeq. It’s comforting, deeply flavorful, and brings people together. In Saudi culture, saleeq is often served at big gatherings, so it also feels symbolic of our hospitality. 

What’s the most difficult dish for you to get right? 

Pastry is always humbling. It requires absolute precision and patience. You can’t improvise with baking the way you can with savory cooking, so it keeps me sharp. 

As a leader, what are you like? 

I believe in discipline, but not in shouting. A kitchen should be built on respect and teamwork. I lead by example. If my team sees me as focused, organized and calm, they mirror that energy. At the end of the day, food tastes better when it’s prepared in a positive environment. 

Chef Aljawharah’s nut and spice cereal bars  




Chef Aljawharah’s nut and spice cereal bars. (Supplied)​​

Yield: 10 bars (30 × 40 cm tray, 1 cm thick) 

Ingredients 

• 180 g Rolled oats, lightly toasted 

• 100 g Puffed rice (or puffed wheat) 

• 60 g Puffed quinoa (or toasted quinoa) 

• 40 g Almonds, roasted & chopped 

• 40 g Pistachios, roasted & chopped 

• 30 g Pumpkin seeds, toasted 

• 30 g Sunflower seeds, toasted 

• 30 g Dried cranberries  

• 20 g Candied orange peel, finely diced 

• 2 g Ground cinnamon 

• 1 g Ground cardamom 

• 1 g Fine sea salt 

Binding syrup: 

• 80 g Brown sugar 

• 80 g Local Honey (or date Molasses) 

• 40 g Water 

• 25 g clarified butter 

• 10 g Cocoa powder 

Finishing: 

• 100 g Dark chocolate 64–70% 

⸻ 

Method 

1. Toast cereals & seeds: Spread oats, puffed quinoa, pumpkin seeds, and sunflower seeds on a tray. Toast at 150°C for 10–12 min until lightly golden. 

2. Prepare syrup: Cook sugar, honey, and water together to 113°C. Off the heat, stir in butter paste and cocoa powder. 

3. Combine: In a mixing bowl, combine toasted cereals, puffed rice, nuts, seeds, dried fruit, candied peel, and spices. Pour in the hot syrup and mix well to coat. 

4. Mold: Spread mixture evenly into a 30 × 40 cm tray, 1 cm thick lined with silicone mat/parchment. Press firmly to compact. 

5. Bake: Bake briefly at 160°C for 6–8 min to stabilize the bar. Cool completely at room temperature. 

6. Cut & finish: For home cooks, Cut into 10 bars. Dip bases in melted dark or drizzle across the top then refrigerate to set the chocolate. For professional use, dip in tempered chocolate or place in molds then top it with tempered chocolate. Crystallize at 17°C before unmolding. 


‘We’re rooted in the local community, but also global’ — inside AlUla Arts Festival 

Updated 23 January 2026
Follow

‘We’re rooted in the local community, but also global’ — inside AlUla Arts Festival 

  • The fifth edition of the festival began Jan. 16 and runs until Feb. 14 

ALULA: The fifth AlUla Arts festival began last weekend. Until Feb. 14, the ancient oasis has become a living backdrop for bold land art, workshops, dance and musical performances inspired by the area’s majestic desert canyons and lush palm groves.  

Sumantro Ghose, the arts and creative industries programming director, said: “We started in 2022 with 19,000 visitors. In 2025 (we had more than) 70,000. So we’re a growing festival. And what makes us unique is that we’re very rooted in the local community, but we’re also global.” 

“We believe that AlUla, as a destination, was built by artists for artists,” Hamad Alhomiedan, director of arts and creative industries at the Royal Commission for AlUla, told Arab News. “That’s why we have this amazing program this year, which will be our largest art festival yet, and it’s basically focused on three cultural assets that we’re developing,” he continued. Those three assets are: AlJadidah Arts District, Wadi AlFann, and the upcoming Contemporary Art Museum of AlUla.  

Aseel Alamoudi, AlUla Design Residency Artwork 2025, displayed at AlUla Design Space. (Courtesy of the RCU and Lorenzo Arrigoni)

One of the highlights of the festival, once again, is Desert X AlUla, which runs until Feb. 28. The international site-specific contemporary art exhibition returns to AlUla for the fourth time, showcasing 11 installations by local, regional, and international artists — from Sara Abdu’s layering of poetry and geological strata to Héctor Zamora’s “Tar HyPar,” which transforms the valley into a musical instrument.  

The exhibition, curated by Zoé Whitley and Wejdan Reda under the vision of artistic directors Neville Wakefield and Raneem Farsi, is inspired by the poetry of the late US-Lebanese writer and philosopher Kahlil Gibran, under the theme “Space Without Measure.”  

“In the spirit of Gibran’s words, this edition of Desert X 2026 unfolds as an invitation to dream, to wander, and to connect with the landscape — not as something observed from a distance, but as something deeply felt. Here, space opens beyond measure, and it is from this shared invitation, the artists begin to speak, each in their own register, material and rhythm, offering personal yet deeply atoned responses to the landscape,” Reda said during the exhibit’s opening ceremony.  

Ayman Zedani's 'The Holy Wadi' is on display in the exhibition 'Arduna.' (Supplied)

Elsewhere, the exhibition “Arduna” (‘our land’) ushers in the pre-opening of AlUla’s Contemporary Art Museum. Running from Feb. 1 to Apr. 15, the exhibit is a collaboration with Centre Pompidou and the French Agency for AlUla development and features contemporary art from the RCU’s collection alongside pieces from France’s Musée National d’Art Moderne, including works by Kandinsky and Picasso.  

Alhomiedan said: “The community sits at the center of the development (of the Contemporary Art Museum). We did more than 30 focus groups, asking ‘What do you want the museum to look like? Do you know what a museum is?’ And ‘How do you imagine the museum can step out of the boundary of the wall and also reach to the houses and go inside these houses?’ Because we don’t believe a museum (to be) this physical space.”  

The AlJadidah Arts District plays a major role in the festival, staging a number of initiatives, including newly commissioned artworks, workshops, exhibitions, film screenings, and musical performances. Saudi-French cultural institution Villa Hegra is hosting the photography exhibition “Not Deserted: AlUla’s Archives in Movement,” which features early 20th-century photographs by Tony André alongside an exhibition of cinematic images of desert landscapes by Saudi filmmaker and Villa Hegra resident Saad Tahaitah, while the AlUla Music Hub presents a number of concerts, ranging from Arabic, to jazz, to fusion. Cinema AlJadidah presents a curated series of art documentaries, feature films, and shorts, set in the open-air, and at ATHR Gallery, visitors can find works by Saudi-born artist Sara Abdu exploring architecture as memory.  

Works on display in the photography exhibition 'Not Deserted.' (Supplied)

Just across from ATHR Galley at Design Space AlUla is “Material Witness: Celebrating Design From Within,” an exhibition curated by Dominique Petit-Frère and Majedah Alduligan and artistically led by Ali Alghazzawi and Arnaud Murand, that highlights the connection between design and place and includes works by five participants in the AlUla Artist Residency’s 2025 design edition. 

Alhomiedan said: “Every single one of these initiatives is inspired by the place and by memory and materials. Because if we don’t focus on that, then you can do this work anywhere else in the world.  

“Focusing on where you are right now — like, the shadows of the palm groves or the palm trees, the different local plants that you can extract pigments from, local stones, different local fabrics, the local flora and fauna — this is how artists explore creativity through the place, memory, and community of AlUla.” 

The festival positions art as a connective pillar between nature and heritage, aiming not only to revive the artistic practices exemplified in the ancient architectural marvels of the tombs in Hegra or the carefully carved statues uncovered in Dadan, but also to utilize their powerful history as proof of the region’s inherent gravitation towards art.