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Ful Kitchen

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Ful Kitchen is a halal restaurant in the German city of Dortmund, named after ful medames, the classic Egyptian and Levantine dish of slow-cooked fava beans. The presence of such a restaurant in Dortmund reflects the diversity of the city's Arab Muslim population, which includes Egyptians, Sudanese, Syrians, Palestinians, Yemenis, and more, each bringing their own culinary traditions to the mix. Ful medames itself is one of the oldest prepared foods in the region, documented in various forms for centuries, and its presence in a Dortmund kitchen is a piece of Cairo, Khartoum, Sana'a, and Damascus brought to the Ruhr. The restaurant serves traditional Arab breakfast fare — ful with olive oil, lemon, cumin, and parsley; tameya (the Egyptian version of falafel); baladi bread; shakshuka; and strong sweet black tea — alongside a menu of lunch and dinner mains including grilled meats, rice dishes, and seasonal Arab favourites. All meat is halal, sourced from trusted suppliers, and the kitchen runs on the rhythms of an Arab Muslim household. For Muslim workers, students, and families across Dortmund, Ful Kitchen offers food that tastes like home, served by people who understand the small details — the right tea temperature, the proper balance of tahini, the importance of warm bread at the start of a meal. The restaurant often fills up on Friday afternoons as men arrive after jumu'ah prayers at one of the nearby mosques, still in their thobes or their best button-down shirts, ready for a generous meal with friends and family. Ramadan brings a special rhythm: the kitchen prepares iftar platters for pickup and delivery, and the dining room hosts iftar meals for students and single migrants who lack the facilities or the company to break their fast alone. The Prophet Muhammad صلى الله عليه وآله وسلم taught that food is best when shared, and Ful Kitchen is one of those places where the shared table is more than a commercial transaction — it is a small daily act of community. A small handwritten sign near the till lists the dishes available that day, usually in Arabic and German, and on Fridays the chef adds a single word in green ink: mabrouk, a modest greeting for the blessed day of Jumu'ah.

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