Serenity Morocco

Cook hearty Berber dishes in the gateway to the Sahara. Learn desert survival cuisine, bread baked in hot sand, and slow-cooked mechui in an earth oven beside a fortified kasbah.
Ouarzazate -- the "Door of the Desert" -- sits at the crossroads of the High Atlas and the Sahara, and its cuisine reflects a remarkable culinary heritage forged by Berber nomads who transformed the sparse ingredients of an arid land into dishes of extraordinary depth and flavour. This three-hour cooking experience takes place beside a centuries-old kasbah on the outskirts of town, where mud-brick walls glow amber in the desert light and the silence of the stony plateau stretches to the horizon. Your host is a Berber elder whose family has lived in this region for generations, and who learned to cook in conditions where resourcefulness was not a choice but a necessity. You begin with taddikt -- bread baked directly in hot sand and embers, a technique still used by Saharan nomads today. The elder demonstrates how the sand's heat creates a perfectly crusted loaf with a soft, steaming interior. You then prepare a traditional mechui -- lamb slow-roasted in an underground earth oven for several hours until it falls apart at the touch of a fork. While the mechui finishes, you prepare harira soup with hand-ground spices, a warm lentil and barley salad, and amlou -- a rich dip of argan oil, almonds, and honey that is the Berber answer to peanut butter. The meal is served on handwoven carpets laid out beneath the kasbah walls, with the Atlas Mountains silhouetted against the southern sky.
Traditional kasbah, outskirts of Ouarzazate