Skip to content Skip to Search
Skip navigation

Debating the Levantine origins of the falafel

Falafel Beit el Zaytoun
Mezze platter including falafel at Lebanese restaurant Beit el Zaytoun in London

Falafels are gaining a mainstream following in Europe and can be found in supermarkets, restaurants, takeaways and street-food stalls everywhere. 

In UK cities alone, Go Falafel has grown into a chain with three outlets in Manchester, two in London and one in Liverpool. Dubai’s Operation: Falafel and Israeli pitta chain Miznon have recently opened in London.

The rise in the Middle Eastern patties’ popularity is attributed to increasing interest in vegetarianism and healthy eating – falafels are often served with salad, tahini, hummus, for example.

The fried balls of ground chickpea or fava beans, with added herbs, spices and onion and garlic have long been a staple in the Middle East. 

The Israeli version uses cumin, coriander, paprika, garlic, onion and fresh herbs in the patty and is served in pitta.

As with hummus, there is heated debate over the origins on falafel, with claims it hails from either Lebanon, Palestine, Israel or even Turkey, Greece and Syria – the patty is ubiquitous in all these countries often as part of a mezze platter.

However, several food historians insist its origins in fact lie in Egypt, where it is made from broad beans rather than chickpeas and known as ta’amiya.

One theory is that Coptic Christians would make the patties during Lent, when meat was eschewed, making falafel, perhaps, the original meat substitute. 

In all probability, falafel is comparatively modern. The word only appears in Egyptian literature after the British occupation in 1882.

Some authorities have speculated that British officers, having acquired a taste for fried vegetable croquettes in India, may have asked their Egyptian cooks to prepare a version using local ingredients. 

If evidence is to be believed, the falafel emerged in Alexandria, Egypt’s principal port and home to the largest concentration of British and European troops. 

Latest articles

Dubai The World Villas

Demand for beach plots sells 80% of The World villas in days

An ultra-luxe villa community planned for Dubai’s The World Islands is more than 80 percent sold only days after first being announced, thanks to the dearth of available beachfront plots in the city. The boutique developer Amali Properties, co-founded by siblings Ali and Amira Sajwani of Damac Properties, said last week that the community will […]

Path, Road, City BHB06R Wall Street Bull in Downtown Manhattan, NYC

Saudi stock trading slumps as interest jumps in US stocks

Saudi trading in US stocks trebled in the fourth quarter of 2023 compared with the previous year to SAR58.7 billion ($15.6 billion), as the kingdom’s interest in US equities revived following the Covid pandemic. Total trading in foreign and domestic markets remains historically low.  The transactions in the US market accounted for more than 97 […]

Investor Tim Draper told AGBI the US must 'swing back to freedom' to avoid losing innovation to countries such as the UAE

Tim Draper: UAE benefits from US crypto ‘overregulation’

Billionaire venture capitalist Tim Draper has criticised the US for its restrictive stance on cryptocurrency, claiming it is driving innovators towards more encouraging and friendlier markets such as the UAE. The Gulf state is actively developing regulatory frameworks to lure new forms of business, amid intense regional economic competition. Dubai and Abu Dhabi have set […]

A subsidiary of Banque Misr will open the first digital-only bank in Egypt this year

Egypt to open first digital bank later this year

Misr Digital Innovation will open Egypt’s first digital bank towards the end of the year, as it looks to appeal to the North African’s country’s younger and unbanked demographic. MTI, a subsidiary of Banque Misr, is the first bank to have received approval to establish a digital bank by the Central Bank of Egypt (CBE) […]