Iceland review - 2015, Side 58

Iceland review - 2015, Side 58
56 ICELAND REVIEW FROM ADDIS ABABA TO RURAL ICELAND Azeb relocated to Iceland from Addis Ababa in mid- 2008 to join her sister who had moved here earlier that year. After meeting Árni in Reykjavík, she spent the following summer with him in Flúðir, his home- town, where he returned each year to grow vege- tables. Once the summer was over, they decided to stay and in 2011, with the help of Azeb’s sister, open Minilik in a former fast food joint. Once she’s finished laying everything out, Azeb presents us with the meal. The injera lines the tray on which the stews are served, a sort of edible tablecloth, soaking up their juices as the meal progresses. The dining room has space for 25 people and is adorned with various souvenirs and other curiosities from Ethiopia. The tables are each decorated with colorful table cloths and vases with fresh flowers—dandelions from the surrounding area and roses from one of the local greenhouses where Azeb works when she isn’t at the restaurant, giving the place a summery feel. Árni is on his way from his other job, where he works for social services with the region’s elderly. COFFEE AND POPCORN Carrying out a traditional coffee ceremony, an inte- gral part of Ethiopian social and cultural life, Azeb heats the coffee beans, sourced from Ethiopia, on a pan over the glowing embers. The room is quickly filled with the pungent smell of coffee, incense and myrrh, the aromatic resin of thorny tree species native to Ethiopia often burned during coffee cere- monies. The beans are then roughly ground with a pestle and mortar and stirred in a traditional coffee pot, after which the coffee is brewed, poured into cups and served with popcorn. While some of Minilik’s guests stop for the pure curiosity factor, others are regulars or have eaten Ethiopian food abroad, Árni tells me as he joins us for coffee. “Some people are trying it for the first time but others are returning—they come back again and again, especially those who have summerhouses here. One person, who stayed in town, came here every day for a week!” The increase in tourists to the country is visible here in Flúðir too, where visitors continue to discover this little piece of Ethiopia in South Iceland. *Restaurant owners Árni Magnús Hannesson and Azeb Kahssay. Minilik Special: beef stew with onion, garlic, ginger, berbere, hot pepper and spiced butter; lamb simmered in mild sauce and seasoned with ginger, garlic and turmeric; chicken marinated in lemon juice, sautéed in spiced butter with pepper, garlic, onions, ginger and spices, hard-boiled egg; and a range of vegetarian dishes including ground chickpeas cooked with onion and garlic. FOOD

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