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Kayal upset by failure to find good Hummus



Sussex Nomad

Well-known member
Aug 26, 2010
18,185
EP
I was already going to make it. It's a bit of headache though - my son likes it smooth with lots of tahini, my wife likes it smooth with lots of lemon and I like it quite chunky. How do I please them all AND Kayal?

Ask Beram how he would make it and tell them petty in laws you have the proper stuff! I don't have this tahini stuff mind, no idea where to buy it, sesame oil will do for me, all the same thing innit?
 




hans kraay fan club

The voice of reason.
Helpful Moderator
Mar 16, 2005
61,515
Chandlers Ford
I was already going to make it. It's a bit of headache though - my son likes it smooth with lots of tahini, my wife likes it smooth with lots of lemon and I like it quite chunky. How do I please them all AND Kayal?

Make it to Beram's taste, and the rest of you lump it.
 






Dick Head

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Jan 3, 2010
13,655
Quaxxann
We could have a whole separate thread on how we are really meant to spell Hoummus/Hummus/Hummous!

Let's put this one to bed, shall we? It is spelt حُمُّص
 
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Postman Pat

Well-known member
Jul 24, 2007
6,971
Coldean
Look we were going to spend €10m on Calleri, just offer that to the company that makes this stuff for their head chef and recipe. Better still buy the whole company and relocate them to Lancing.
 




MattBackHome

Well-known member
Jul 7, 2003
11,736
I'm gutted for Kemy Agustein that we didn't have this level of interest when he bemoaned the poor quality of pickled pigs ears in Brighton.

It could all have ended so differently.
 








burnee54

East Upper Hermit
Sep 1, 2011
1,151
up the downs
The unlikely friendship at heart of Brighton’s surge

4a3bb58a-9c48-11e5_1023965c.jpg

  • Kayal, right, an Israeli Muslim, celebrates his winner with Hemed, a Jew, after Zamora, below, had equalisedGraham Hughes for The Times


James Masters
Last updated at 12:01AM, December 7 2015

Beram Kayal and Tomer Hemed united in bid to fire club’s promotion campaign
It is a journey that began in Haifa and could yet finish with the Barclays Premier League in Brighton & Hove Albion.
The story of how two children from northern Israel, one Jewish, one Muslim, became best friends and went on to play in the biggest football league in the world reads like something from a Hollywood movie.
Beram Kayal, a Muslim and a proud Arab Israeli, and Tomer Hemed, who is Jewish, have known each other since their days as wide-eyed dreamers at Maccabi Haifa’s academy. Now the possibility of playing in England’s top flight is beginning to dawn on them as Brighton extended their unbeaten run to 19 matches.
Charlton Athletic came close to bursting that bubble on Saturday when they took a 2-0 first-half lead at the Amex Stadium before Brighton staged a remarkable comeback to take all three points — with Hemed the match-winning hero. James Wilson, on loan from Manchester United, dragged Brighton back into the match before the turning point of Patrick Bauer, the Charlton defender, being sent off. Bobby Zamora equalised and Hemed’s header five minutes from time sealed a 3-2 victory. The Premier League dream of Kayal and Hemed is drawing closer.
Their friendship, which ultimately persuaded Hemed to make the move from Almeria last summer to be reunited with Kayal, has not only benefited the pair, but the club too. “He is like a big brother to me and it has always been like that,” Kayal said of Hemed. “We’ve been good friends from the day we met and we have the same birthday so that’s always special. As soon as I knew the club wanted Tomer to come here I phoned him and told him how great it was.”
Kayal, who enjoyed four and a half years with Celtic before moving to Brighton last January, was the driving force behind Hemed’s decision to leave Spain.
The forward had enjoyed success with Real Mallorca and Almeria while playing against the likes of Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi but it was in England where his heart lay.
The close friendship between the pair is well known to all who know them and yet they could scarcely be any different.
Kayal, 27, who is a year younger, is more outspoken and more extrovert. He is conscious of his fashion, his hair is spiked immaculately and he talks in the manner in which he plays, quickly, seemingly without needing to breathe and, most importantly, is upset by his failure to find good humus in England.
“In Acre, near where I lived in Israel, the humus is perfect,” he says with a hint of frustration. “I can’t find any here.”
Food aside, Kayal, who grew up in the village of Jaidedi, and was often forced to take an eight-hour round trip to training, is happy on the south coast. He is married to Angela and has a son, whom he is rather delighted to have named “Pirlo” after the Italy midfielder, Andrea.
Hemed is more relaxed, shy, perhaps less inclined to be the centre of attention. He recently became a father to baby Mia and is married to his high-school sweetheart, Shunit.
Kayal prays every day and recites passages from the Koran before matches, Hemed visits the local synagogue in Hove on Friday evenings to welcome in Shabbat (the Jewish Sabbath) and often prays before taking to the field.
Two men, two different religions, one friendship — forged on the fields of Haifa, they are the product of a club in Maccabi who are hugely proud of their work in bringing communities together. “It didn’t matter whether you were Arab, Jewish, Muslim, Christian — the club brought everyone together and the people who developed that togetherness were unbelievable,” Kayal said.
“All the players, like myself and Tomer, were brothers. It made us better people. It was a pleasure to play for Maccabi Haifa. I learnt so, so much there.”
It is a sentiment that Hemed, who was born just outside Haifa in Kiryat Tiv’on, echoes.
“I know we never felt any negativity and the club and city are both very proud of that. It isn’t dangerous in Haifa, people are not living in fear,” he said.
That sense of community and togetherness is something Kayal and Hemed have taken into the Israel team — a squad that includes those from Jewish, Muslim and Circassian backgrounds.
Kayal, one of the more prominent Arab Israelis to feature for the national side, is visibly proud of his heritage and having made his debut some seven years ago, feels at home in reciting and listening to the Koran in the dressing room.
“When I say something from the Koran, I really focus,” Kayal said. “People might think that’s special but from the first day I entered the dressing room I’ve been comfortable.”
Kayal has been one of the outstanding midfielders in the Sky Bet Championship and Hemed’s six goals have proved crucial.
“If you had asked most people before the start of the season whether we would be in this position then most wouldn’t have predicted it,” Kayal said.
“Nobody expected us to be up there, but we can do it.”





 
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Sussex Nomad

Well-known member
Aug 26, 2010
18,185
EP
Made my houmous, with extra hot chilli powder, looking forward to this evening!
 




studio150

Well-known member
Jul 30, 2011
29,681
On the Border
I blame Kayal's agent. If good humus is that important why was it not in his contract to be supplied with this on a daily basis.
 


Megazone

On his last warning
Jan 28, 2015
8,679
Northern Hemisphere.
I blame Kayal's agent. If good humus is that important why was it not in his contract to be supplied with this on a daily basis.

It originally was but complying with the FFP meant we had to cut back on the Houmus bonuses in the contract deals.

I don't blame Kayal for coming out and speaking about this to the press. I'd be a bit pea'd off.
 


Chinman3000

Well-known member
Sep 28, 2011
1,267
The unlikely friendship at heart of Brighton’s surge

4a3bb58a-9c48-11e5_1023965c.jpg

  • Kayal, right, an Israeli Muslim, celebrates his winner with Hemed, a Jew, after Zamora, below, had equalisedGraham Hughes for The Times


James Masters
Last updated at 12:01AM, December 7 2015



Can someone photoshop Hemed into a pot of hoummus please?
 


Igzilla

Well-known member
Sep 27, 2012
1,650
Worthing
I think someone should source some top notch houmous and, like the Milk tray advert of old, abseil into the AMEX under the cover of darkness and leave a suitable deposit on Kayal's bench in the dressing room :whistle:
 








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