- Published: 24 June 2025
- ISBN: 9781529916423
- Imprint: Ebury Press
- Format: Hardback
- Pages: 320
- RRP: $65.00
Boustany
A celebration of vegetables from my Palestine











- Published: 24 June 2025
- ISBN: 9781529916423
- Imprint: Ebury Press
- Format: Hardback
- Pages: 320
- RRP: $65.00
Full of food that’s sincere and homely but also bold and vibrant. I want to cook everything. There’s nothing like being able to cook the recipes from someone else’s childhood. Vibrant, intense, bold food from Sami’s childhood and home. A gift of a book.
Diana Henry
I have been working alongside Sami in one form or another for nearly 20 years and have never failed to be inspired by him. He is supremely graceful in the kitchen, has an exquisitely-tuned palate and uncannily good judgment. It is no coincidence that Sami’s food is always delicious, and true to its name, Boustany is a verdant treasure. How lucky we are to have this beautiful book.
Helen Goh
I have known Sami for over 25 years now and have always loved his food and his personal modern take on classics from our region. In this book, he applies that same inspired take on vegetarian and vegan dishes from his tragic homeland, making this collection of recipes and stories even more invaluable given the systematic erasure of both Palestine and Palestinians.
Anissa Helou
This is my dream cookbook. It's full of heart, soul and Sami's very delicious food. I have a library of cookbooks, but Sami's are one of the only ones I genuinely cook from.
Meera Sodha
I love Sami Tamimi’s wonderful Boustany. It is thrilling and also moving to see what a great chef has done with the flavourful home cooking of a people with a rich and diverse culinary tradition and a deep connection with the land.
Claudia Roden
Yotam and Sami brought a generation of Brits and then Americans to za’atar and harissa and pomegranate molasses. They made us comfortable with a type of ingredient and a type of food that didn’t really exist in the mainstream before that.
Samin Nosrat
There are wine bars in New York’s Greenwich Village run by young chefs where, I bet if you looked through the vegetable sides on their menu, a significant chunk would derive from "Jerusalem" — and they might not even know it.
Brooks Headley