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Falafels and Poor Boys at Zabak's Mediterranean Café

The falafel sandwich at Zabak's is a mouthful of extremes. There's hot and cold, soft and crunchy, spicy and soothingly bland, with salty and sour thrown in for good measure. To make the sandwich, a couple of spiced ground chickpea patties are fried extremely crispy, then placed inside toasted pita bread with lettuce, tomato, tahini sauce and a sprinkle of the sumac herb blend called za'atar. Then, in Zabak's distinctive Gulf Coast version of the falafel sandwich, a generous dash of Cajun Chef hot sauce is added. Finally, the counterman applies the Zabak touch — he pushes down on top of the sandwich to crush the crunchy falafel patties inside and spread them out evenly.

Zabak's are the standard by which Houston falafels are judged.
Troy Fields
Zabak's are the standard by which Houston falafels are judged.

Location Info

Zabak's Mediterranean Cafe

5901 Westheimer
Houston, TX 77057

Category: Restaurant > Greek

Region: Galleria

Details

Hours:

11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Mondays through Saturdays.

Falafel (each): $.76

Falafel sandwich: $5.49

Falafel plate: $7

Kafta kebab plate: $8 Beef shawarma plate: $7.50

5901 Westheimer, 713-977-7676.

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Zabak's falafel sandwich has been the best in the city for 30 years — which is a neat trick, since Zabak's Mediterranean Café at Westheimer and Foun­tain­view has only been open since 2005. Allow me to explain.

In 1975, a Palestinian immigrant named George Zabak arrived in Houston. He and his wife Kay opened a sandwich shop on Hillcroft called Mama's Po'Boys, which became a favorite hangout for high school students and the local Middle Eastern community. The Zabaks were new to poor boys, but they knew a lot about falafels.

Their falafel sandwich became the city's favorite and has remained the standard by which others are judged to this day. George Zabak once delivered his famous sandwiches fresh every day to Whole Foods and health food stores all over town. After the death of his wife Kay, a grief-stricken George Zabak quietly closed Mama's Po'Boys.

In 2005 the seventysomething George Zaback and his daughter Sandra decided to resurrect the family business at the current Westheimer and Fountainview location. But before the doors opened, George passed away. Sandra, with the help of two of her brothers, opened the restaurant anyway. At the new location, Houston's first family of falafels has faithfully re-­created their father's awesome sandwich.
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A falafel is a vegan chickpea patty; it is usually fried but can also be grilled. The standard recipe calls for onion, garlic, cumin and pepper. Zabak's falafels are bright green and spicy hot. In a 1999 Houston Press review of Mama's Po'Boys, George Zabak revealed that his unique green falafel recipe contained parsley and green jalapeño peppers, as well as some spices that he kept secret.

I am guessing that George Zabak didn't set out to invent the Gulf Coast fusion falafel. More likely, over the course of several decades, Zabak's falafel evolved to suit the tastes of his Houston customers. This sort of falafel evolution has been going on for centuries.

Originally made in Egypt from ground fava beans, falafels are now made from either ground fava beans, ground chickpeas or a mixture of both. But the form is endlessly adaptable. In south Tel Aviv, one famous falafel stand sells green falafels colored with parsley, red falafels seasoned with red pepper and orange falafels made with sweet potato. You can get chicken-stuffed falafels in Detroit, Dungeness crab-stuffed falafels in San Francisco and vegetable-stuffed falafels in Chicago.

In the Arab world, fried falafel patties are often eaten as a mezza, or appetizer. At Zabak's, you can get falafel patties alone, on a plate with hummus and tabouli, or in a falafel sandwich. While Zabak's distinctive falafels are tasty in any presentation, it's the falafel sandwich that made them famous.
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Zabak's Mediterranean Café is a spotless little walk-up service restaurant with marble floors and 17 tables. For a Mediterranean deli, it's disturbingly antiseptic. There is no display case full of savory salads and simmering lamb shanks, no tantalizing gyro machine; in fact, no food is visible at all. Instead, there are bottles of wine lined up along the front counter. I wonder how many bottles of wine they're selling? It seems like the second generation is trying to take the family poor boy shop upscale.

I sampled an excellent kafta kebab plate there one day at lunchtime. The ground beef was wonderfully seasoned with parsley and garlic, and it came with grilled onions and peppers over rice. I can't say I'm a fan of Zabak's chunky hummus or lackluster tabouli. I wasn't very impressed with the gyro salad I sampled either, which was monotonously long on the romaine. Both the gyro meat on the salad and the beef shawarma meat I tried on another plate were sliced too thin and tasted too dry. These kinds of meats are much more appealing at restaurants that have vertical roasters and a steady volume of customers so the meat is always freshly sliced and juicy.

The thing to eat at Zabak's is a falafel sandwich. Since I am not really a falafel expert, I took a short falafel tour of the city in order to check the oft-repeated claim that Zabak's are the best.

The worst I had was at Phoe­ni­cia Market on Westheimer, where I do my olive and pita bread shopping. The falafel patties weren't fried to order, they were already made and reheated. And the pita bread wasn't split. A whole round of pita was wrapped around a couple of falafel patties and the lettuce, tomatoes, pickles and tahini sauce like a big taco. You had to bite through a whole lot of bread to get to the reheated falafels. I liked the pickles, but otherwise the sandwich was dull.

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  • Jay Francis 08/09/2008 2:05:00 AM

    I quote directly from Paula Wolfert's The Cooking of the Eastern Mediterranean. Wolfert wrote the definitive book on Moroccan cooking in the 80's and has since proven herself again and again to be a solid source for information. "To clear up the confusion, around the eastern Mediterranean, the word za'atar is used two different ways: to refer to a class of herbs and to refer to a spice blend of za'atar and sumac....As for the spice blend, it is a mixture of sumac, sesame seeds, and one or more of the various za'atar herbs. It is part of a breakfast dish of hot, flat bread dipped in olive oil and then sprinkled with the mixture.

  • RBobby 08/06/2008 4:35:00 PM

    aziza- Who said anything about Israel being the origin? He wrote that Egypt was the origin. And that a version is served in Tel Aviv.

  • aziza 08/04/2008 8:53:00 PM

    Falafel has been around longer than Israel...therefore you can't say it is Israeli in origin, only eaten there as well as remade into their own versions. Think Tex-Mex a la Arabia-- substitute our hispanic cooks for Palestinians and you have 'Israeli Falafel'.

  • gotdebt 08/04/2008 5:46:00 PM

    Back to the food; I never ever like falafels until I tried these. Sublime.

  • omar again 08/04/2008 4:36:00 AM

    Oh yeah- this list of the places that use the same falafel is even larger than stated. Nonetheless, there are other factors such as oil it is subsequently fried in, many places add parsley or other ingredients to the falafel mix, what the sandwich is served with inside, etc. I like Aladdin's because it is never over fried, comes with lots of tahini, and I can get it on wheat pita, which is how I get it in Lebanon. They also can grill the whole sandwich for ya when it is done. As for 'puffinstuff', I assume you are someone who knows me yet does not have the 'fortitude' to use your real name. The only reason I pointed out the wiki entry was to show that the logic did not juve eeven considering wiki's bad track record. Whatever. I was merely pointing out an ambiguous description of the herb Walsh made lazily... Assuming people are trying to replicate recipes, it is good for folks to know they need not purchase Sumac for recipes that call for zaatar. I appreciate Walsh's work and am an avid reader. He is on 99% of the time but needs to be called out on those little things. Seems like he handles it alot better than some of you folks. Oh well, I will keep on reading anyway.

  • omar again 08/04/2008 4:36:00 AM

    Oh yeah- this list of the places that use the same falafel is even larger than stated. Nonetheless, there are other factors such as oil it is subsequently fried in, many places add parsley or other ingredients to the falafel mix, what the sandwich is served with inside, etc. I like Aladdin's because it is never over fried, comes with lots of tahini, and I can get it on wheat pita, which is how I get it in Lebanon. They also can grill the whole sandwich for ya when it is done. As for 'puffinstuff', I assume you are someone who knows me yet does not have the 'fortitude' to use your real name. The only reason I pointed out the wiki entry was to show that the logic did not jive eeven considering wiki's bad track record. Whatever. I was merely pointing out an ambiguous description of the herb Walsh made lazily... Assuming people are trying to replicate recipes, it is good for folks to know they need not purchase Sumac for recipes that call for zaatar. I appreciate Walsh's work and am an avid reader. He is on 99% of the time but needs to be called out on those little things. Seems like he handles it alot better than some of you folks. Oh well, I will keep on reading anyway.

  • robb walsh 08/03/2008 4:21:00 AM

    Point taken--I will no longer describe zaatar as a "sumac herb blend." Thanks to Omar's comments, I now know that a leafy green herb indigenous to the Middle East is the primary ingredient in zaatar--not sumac. Meanwhile, over on the Eating Our Words blog where the falafel discussion started, we had a late arriving and very surprising comment from a falafel maker in the Heights which I have pasted here. Omar, this is the falafel you get at Alladin's? Steve Marques says: I have perhaps the best kept falafel secret in Houston, we have a falafel manufacturer in the Heights. Olive Valley Falafel is available at Phoenicia(retail) both uncooked and heat and eat for those of you that do not have a fryer and at Adams Grocery. We are also in both Fadi's ( number 3 coming soon), Alladin's, Cafe Mezza, Murphy's delis, Pita Gourmet, Kojaks, Cafe Petit, Waterside Cafe, Stelios Deli, The Filling Station, Cliffs Burgers, Go Greek and Tommy's on Post Oak. Our falafel is green and made with jalapenos. We make the regular shape and now also make a veggi-burger. For any info or questions you can call the office 713-426-0300.

  • Plainclothes 08/03/2008 3:45:00 AM

    Interesting debate, gents~~~~Robb Walsh's description does make you question his familiarity with the stuff: "a sprinkle of the sumac herb blend called za'atar". I've enjoyed plenty of zaatar that is sumac-free, and knowing that, I probably wouldn't say "the sumac herb blend called zaatar". On the other hand, like Walsh says, it's probably a crime of semantics, rather than the expedience-whatever conspiracy Omar sees. And, I'm not sure how much Omar furthers his argument by citing Wiki one moment and then trashing it within the span of a few sentences. Anyway, thanks for the debate; this forum has taken the place of houston.eats for me, where I used to enjoy the bickering/education.

  • puffinstuff 08/03/2008 3:08:00 AM

    Omar, contractions baby, contractions. And weren't you the guy who did that defunct Free Press Cuizine thing? Guess you're saying zaatar is akin to shrimp scampi. But I'm not sure what point you're making. What? Zaatar means oregano, so therefore all zaatar mix has to contain oregano, and never sumac? What's the Arabic word then for the herb blend that excludes oregano? And using your logic, does that mean that all curry must curry leaves?

  • robb walsh 08/03/2008 12:53:00 AM

    Actually, my source was the guy who blends my zaatar, Peter Basralian of Phoenicia International Market. And he said the zaatar he blends contains thyme (not oregano), sumac, sesame seeds and salt--and that's what it says on the zaatar bread package under the legally required list of ingredients. Maybe he's wrong, I encourage you to go talk to him about it. I posted the wikipedia entry because it shows thyme and oregano are two English translations for the same Middle Eastern herb. Thanks for your passion about semantics.

  • omar 08/02/2008 6:48:00 PM

    Did you even read that Wiki entry ? It makes clear that the name Zaatar comes from the Oregano, just as I stated before. Again, just because their is a blend that uses sumac does not make Walsh's original statement accurate. It is just another gaff in Anglo-Food Journalism that finds expedience and novelty more important than accuracy. Just say it: Zaatar is oregano. You can blend it with whatever you like, but it is still just oregano! Take that out and it ceases to be zaatar. As for Wikipedia, any schmuck for Ohio can edit the zaatar entry and decide that zaatar is really horseradish. Now that I know that Walsh uses Wikipedia for his accuracy, I will see his articles in a different light. As a matter of fact, that Wiki entry was edited today! Is Walsh editing Wiki to suit his mis-information? Wow!? So maybe your the frog and maybe your a coward for not using your name. Can I get a witness?

  • omnibusty 08/02/2008 6:59:00 AM

    OMAR: ribbitt, ribbitt, as I, Omar the frog, look up from my well, ribbitt, ribbitt, and behold the blue sky above, ribbitt, ribbitt, I proclaim that the ring of sky is absolutely all there is of the world, ribbitt, ribbitt, to think further of the world is folly, for I have just spent a month in the capital of Lebanon and never once whiffed sumac....from my well

  • fishbein 08/02/2008 6:00:00 AM

    Well, that settles it then! Omar just spent a month in Lebanon's capital, Beruit, and nowhere did he find sumac used in the zatar. Is Omar a frog who lives in a well, looks up one day, sees only the sky above, and concludes that his view is actually all there is in the world?

  • robb walsh 08/01/2008 5:42:00 PM

    Here is the Wikipedia entry:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Za'atar "Za'atar (Arabic: زعتر‎; also spelled satar, zahatar or zatr) is a mixture of herbs and spices used as a condiment with Middle Eastern origins. The name of the condiment shares the Arabic name of the herb used as the main ingredient.[1] Latin names for the herbs called za'atar include Origanum majorana (sweet marjoram), Origanum syriacum (also known as Bible hyssop, Syrian oregano and wild marjoram), and Thymus capitatus (thyme).[2] Za'atar barri ("wild za'atar") is identified as Origanum vulgare which in English can refer to European oregano, oregano, pot marjoram, wild marjoram, winter majoram, and wintersweet.[3] Both oregano and marjoram are closely related Mediterranean plants of the Labiatae family which also includes mint and sage, so it is unsurprising that these herbs are commonly used as substitutes for one another.[4] Za'atar is generally prepared using ground dried thyme, oregano, marjoram, or some combination thereof, mixed with toasted sesame seeds, and salt.[4] Some varieties may add savory, cumin, coriander[5] or fennel seed. A Lebanese variety of Za'atar usually contains sumac berries, and has a distinct dark red color."

  • Omar again 08/01/2008 1:20:00 AM

    PS- I just returned from spending a month in Beirut and nowhere in the scores of cafes did I find a sumac blend of zaatar. Sumac is used more so in the khalijah (Persian Gulf and surrounding countries) than it is used in the Levant (Syria,Lebanon,Palestine).

  • Omar again 08/01/2008 1:17:00 AM

    Wrong again. Zaatar is the Arabic translation for their regional oregano. When an Arab puts oregano in spaghetti sauce, it is Zaatar. Check the etymology Robb. Your logic is like saying mustard is made of honey as some people make honey mustard. Duh!? Accuracy matters. I did indeed spell Aladdin wrong though.

  • robb walsh 08/01/2008 12:10:00 AM

    Sorry It's Peter Basralian www.phoeniciafoods.com

  • robb walsh 07/31/2008 9:44:00 PM

    Zaatar is indeed a many-splendored thing. Peter Baralian of Phoenicia International Foods tells me the zaatar blended there contains thyme, sumac, sesame and salt. That's the ingredient list published on the package of zaatar bread sold by Phoenicia as well. Wikipedia has a different recipe. The confusion may be due to varying translations of the names of Middle Eastern herbs.

  • julius 07/31/2008 5:30:00 PM

    Hey, Omar, do YOUR homework and comprehend that zatar has many variations and often does include sumac, especially in Lebanon. And Aladdin is spelled Aladdin.

  • omar afra 07/29/2008 10:14:00 PM

    Hey Walsh, do your homework and let people know there is no sumac in zaatar. Also, Steve, thanks for reminding us of the cultural imperialism of the Israeli's and their appropriation of falafel, among other things. Anyone who knows hummos from shinola know the best 3 places in town for falafel are: Zabaks Alladin Al's Quick Stop on Waugh 'Israeli falafel' my tuz!

  • Steve Gilbert 07/28/2008 8:14:00 PM

    The best falafel in Houston is at Super Pita, on Hillcroft between Braeswood & Willowbend. They do it Israeli-style with fried veggies on top. Incredible!

  • Kitchen Raider 07/27/2008 5:21:00 PM

    By far the best falafels in Houston are at Abdullah's where they grill the flat bread and the chick pea patties are dense with a nutty texture- ask for it with a side a hummus and you are in heaven.

  • Yola Ankar 07/25/2008 10:51:00 PM

    I agree 100% I always have some with my salad, They're the best. Great article!!!

 

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