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Zahav: Gold from Solomonov

Craig LaBan
Email Craig LaBan, follow Craig LaBan on Twitter
Fried sweetbreads, chickpeas, green chilies and garlic, as served at Zahav. (David M Warren / Staff Photographer)
Fried sweetbreads, chickpeas, green chilies and garlic, as served at Zahav. (David M Warren / Staff Photographer)
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About the restaurant
237 St. James Place
Philadelphia, PA 19106
215-625-8800
Rating:
Neighborhood: Old City - Society Hill Parking: Street and valet parking.
Handicap access: Wheelchair accessible (from rear of building)
Hours: inner Sunday through Thursday, 5-10 p.m.; Friday and Saturday, until 11 p.m.
Reservations: Recommended
Open Table
Prices: $$$
Payment methods:
American Express
MasterCard
Visa
Cuisine type: Middle Eastern
Meals Served:   Dinner - Mon. thru Sun.
Style: Israeli street food meets modern brilliance in the hands chef Michael Solomonov, whose wood-fired Society Hill kitchen turns out some of the most evocative and inventive little dishes in the city, from charcoal-grilled duck kebabs to fried cauliflower, soulful pomegranate-braised lamb shoulder and hummus so good it redefines hummus. The personable and knowledgeable servers ably guide diners through the small-plate menu (best in the affordable tasting meals), as well as a stand-out Israeli wine list that helps make Zahav a completely transporting experience.
Specialties: Salatim and hummus (foul, masbacha or Turkish variations); laffa; Yemenite soup; crispy haloumi; fried cauliflower; house-smoked sable; fried sweetbreads; grilled duck hearts; Jerusalem kugel; grape leaves; kibbe naya; duck kebab; chicken shashlik; crispy branzino; lamb shoulder; kataifi; basboosa; hazelnut-date rugelach. Small plates, $7-$12; Tayim five-plate menu, $38; Ha'yom six-plate menu, $48.
Alcohol: An affordable beer and wine list, and a fanciful cocktail menu — a mint-juleplike classic lemonnana; Marble Rye infused with pumpernickel and caraway; and a gin Israeli Salad Martini with tomato and cucumber water.
Philly.com Dining
The Rating Key
$ = cheap eats
$$ = moderate priced; most entrees $16-$25
$$$ = premium priced; most entrees $26-$35
$$$$ = hey, big spender; most entrees $36 and up
Superior
Rare; sets fine-dining standards.
Excellent
Excels in every category of the dining experience.
Very Good
Interesting, with above-average food.
Hit-or-miss
Poor — No bells
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Zahav

Upgraded from 3 bells.

Young chefs, especially those lucky few with the kind of incandescent creativity that surges through Michael Solomonov, often need time to get out of the way of their own talent.

Such was the case with Zahav, the evocative tribute to modern Israeli flavors that he and partner Steven Cook opened nearly four years ago in Society Hill.

"I was confused," concedes Solomonov, 33, who debuted in this glass-and-Jerusalem-limestone box of a room with two separate menus: one a faithful ode to traditional Israeli street food; the other an overthought, esoteric ramble of fussy Nouveau Med plates.

Much has changed since then. The service has both mellowed and become focused under the buoyant Eilon Gigi. The wine list collected an intriguing cellar of fine Israeli and Lebanese wines. And since the chef smartly merged these two menus a couple of years ago into one soulful, more harmonious stream of za'atar-dusted inspirations - winning national awards from James Beard along the way - he has become one of our true culinary stars.

No chef in the city is creating food as thrillingly personal and well-executed. It's little wonder his fans will stand in line for harissa-dusted fried chicken and pomegranate-glazed doughnuts at the obscure South Philly corner that is his quirky Federal Donuts.

His small plates at Zahav, meanwhile, are vivid, fresh, and inventive, whether it's a riff on Yemenite soup with braised turkey and baby turnips bathed in earthy fenugreek broth, or a nod to his Eastern European roots with house-smoked sable mounded atop fresh challah that oozes egg yolk when you take a slice.

You'll see Solomonov most nights working dough in front of the wood-fired taboon oven, dusting sesame and spice atop the pliant scrolls of warm laffa pita that come to each table, often with a plate of the planet's silkiest hummus (try the buttered Turkish variation) and a wrought-iron tree of eight "salatim." Don't skip these unique little salads, which, ranging from beets in tahini to winter tabbouleh with apple, pomegranate, and walnuts, hint at Solomonov's gift for vegetables. His deep-fried cauliflower with herbed labne yogurt is also rightfully legendary.

But Zahav is also a carnivore's haven, with a glossy hunk of amazingly tender lamb shoulder on the bargain $45 Mesibah tasting - brined, smoked, braised in pomegranate juice over chickpeas, then served with crispy yellow rice - that is simply profound. Then there is the coffee-braised brisket he melds with cherries and turmeric into a cake of crispy fideos noodles for Jerusalem kugel. The charcoal-grilled kebabs, whether chicken marinated in mango pickle over pumpkin pilaf, or duck ground with foie gras, clove, and pistachios beside tangy-sweet streaks of barberry puree, are simply sublime.

Adventure eaters shouldn't miss the meaty grilled duck hearts, or the minted raw lamb kibbe. Even better: a paper cone of crispy sweetbreads fried with chickpea flour and pungent green skhug, just one of the many spice blends that lends Zahav, despite its modern approach, the convincing echo of a faraway, exotic place.

Thankfully, it's ours to taste. The ever-exciting adventure of Zahav - Hebrew for "gold" - is living up to its name.

3
Comments   
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 2:50 AM, 02/05/2012
    Israeli street food are the delights of the modern brilliance of the Palestinian cuisine.
    Powelton villager
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 10:07 AM, 02/05/2012
    This is a restaurant?? I walk down Walnut Street everyday and thought this place was a Jewish school or something.
    TyroneShoes
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 12:35 PM, 02/12/2012
    As far as I'm concerned Mid Eastern food is an acquired taste. But after reading the above review I went there the other night with three friends and did my very best - but I didn't acquire the taste.
    My friends loved the food so my opinion is definitely the minority vote and I'm not in any way saying the food was good or bad - just not to my liking.
    What I can say is that of all the restaurants in Center City with a high decibel level this is among the very highest. Conversation is out of the question here and if you're expecting to get any advice/help with the menu anything your very friendly server gives you will be lost somewhere between his/her mouth and your ears. I don't know what the sound track was but it included long, loud, raucous applause after each song.
    He Visto Todo


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