Windsor Star

LET GO IN Israel

The ancient city of Acre is home to a white-bearded ‘prophet of fish and seafood’

- SYLVIE BIGAR

The water washes over me. Sometimes almost burning, sometimes shockingly cold. There are no windows, only circular holes in the dome-shaped ceiling that filter the morning light, but I sense the Mediterran­ean Sea a few steps away. Lying on a hot slab of marble, I breathe in the steamy clouds of the 400-year-old Turkish bath. I’ve arrived at chef Uri Jeremias’ Efendi Hotel in Acre, in northern Israel. Time to let go.

A UNESCO World Heritage Site, the walled port city of Acre has been inhabited for more than 4,000 years. At the crossroads of the trade routes between Europe, Asia and Africa, the peninsula harboured Egyptians, Persians, Romans and Arabs before the crusaders made it the capital of their Kingdom of Jerusalem, leaving a remarkably intact complex of ruins. Centuries later, the Ottomans added their own imprint, often on top of former constructi­on.

Today, it might as well be the fief of Jeremias, a self-taught, whitebeard­ed prophet of fish and seafood whose simple whitewashe­d restaurant, Uri Buri, (“buri” means mullet) is often lauded as one of the best fish restaurant­s in Israel. And now, Jeremias is launching cultural seminars to introduce travellers to the Western Galilee, his beloved region.

Jeremias, 71, was born eight kilometres away in Nahariya. Thrown out of school at 16, he says he spent many years backpackin­g, then travelling in a minibus, first throughout Europe, then to Afghanista­n and India. As he discovered “the magic of the markets and the connection between flavour and culture,” the kitchen in his bus became a meeting point for fellow travellers — 20 years before he opened Uri Buri.

“People tend to order the food they know,” he said. “So we tailor our tasting menu to what’s best that day, to expand their repertoire.”

I didn’t know I liked fresh anchovies — plump, meaty and lightly brushed with local olive oil, vastly different from the salty, shrivelled specimens that adorn our Caesar salads. A sliced branch of calamari — poached, then grilled — seemed the perfect pillow for caramelize­d zucchini petals, and the wasabi sorbet atop salmon sashimi offered an ideal combinatio­n of fire and ice.

In 2003, Jeremias bought two adjacent 19th-century Ottoman houses in the old city, a few steps from his successful seaside eatery, and spent the next nine years melding them into the 12-room Efendi Hotel, the only luxury boutique hotel in Acre.

“The renovation lasted until 2012,” he said. “I wanted to bring back the soul of these homes. Who needs stainless steel or glass?”

From the breakfast room carved out within an old chapel, I descended a long stairway to the cool wine cellar, where the walls show strata of different stone patterns dating from the Byzantine and Ottoman eras. But the vaulted lobby, more than 6.5 metres high, combines joyful contempora­ry furniture and ancient artifacts, creating a sort of hip historical atmosphere.

Upstairs, I noticed a bouquet of ceramic paintbrush­es decorating a long, rustic console carved from a tree. Everywhere, towering French windows opened onto the roofs of the ancient town and the sea beyond. The dimensions of the public areas, the grey marble floors and the formal chandelier­s lend a sense of grandeur, but the warm smiles of the young staff spoke only of comfort and warmth.

“‘Efendi’ means lord,” said Roi Samogora, the hotel manager. “The Efendi Hotel was the house of the lord of the town.”

“So is Jeremias the new lord?” I asked. “No, it’s you. It’s your house now.” Across from my second floor room is a massive eight-metre-long balcony. The frescoes seem to take their inspiratio­n from the emerald green roof of the minaret and the indigo sea in the distance.

Jeremias has reason to be most proud of the minutiae involved in the restoratio­n of the painted ceilings and cornices. In tribute, a pair of pants stained with the paint used by the Venetian artists, who spent many months restoring the frescoes, lies in a small alcove next to photograph­s showing the stages of the renovation.

“I didn’t want to create a museum,” Jeremias said. “But we documented every paint tone and every floor tile. After the repair, we replaced them in exactly the same way.”

It’s that passion for this region and its history that led Jeremias to launch the Crusaders Seminars, a four-day immersion involving lectures, archaeolog­ical tours and food-and-wine experience­s, led by Efraim Lev, a professor who is both a historian of medicine and a tour guide. Attendees stay, of course, at the Efendi and eat at Uri Buri.

I would have to come back for the seminars, but I walked through the old town and into the ancestral covered souk of Acre, allowing the dim light and the aromas to transport me to a different, ancient era. I stood in line for delicious, smooth humus at the stall of Humus Said and then bargained like a fiend for the most fragrant spices at Hamudi Kurdi Spices and Turkish Coffee.

Back at Efendi for the sunset on the rooftop, sipping wine the colour of honey, I knew the modern highway to Haifa wasn’t far, but as the timeless call of the muezzin rose above Acre, I let go of past and future. For once, I stayed still.

 ?? ASAF PINCHUK/ WASHINGTON POST SIVAN ASKAYO/WASHINGTON POST ?? From the Efendi rooftop is a sweeping view of Acre and the Mediterran­ean Sea beyond.
LEFT: An Uri Buri seafood dish.
ASAF PINCHUK/ WASHINGTON POST SIVAN ASKAYO/WASHINGTON POST From the Efendi rooftop is a sweeping view of Acre and the Mediterran­ean Sea beyond. LEFT: An Uri Buri seafood dish.
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 ??  ?? Uri Jeremias
Uri Jeremias

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