Recipes for success: Chef Federico Erroi  offers advice, a tasty crème brûlée recipe 

Recipes for success: Chef Federico Erroi  offers advice, a tasty crème brûlée recipe 
Federico Erroi heads the pastry team at CÉ LA VI Dubai. (Supplied)
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Updated 11 July 2025
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Recipes for success: Chef Federico Erroi  offers advice, a tasty crème brûlée recipe 

Recipes for success: Chef Federico Erroi  offers advice, a tasty crème brûlée recipe 

DUBAI: Federico Erroi’s culinary story begins in Florence, Italy, guided by his grandmother’s steady hands. She taught young Federico how to make pastry cream, sparking his lifelong fascination with desserts and the discipline behind them. 

 “I was never the best at theoretical subjects in school,” Erroi tells Arab News. “But when it came to getting my hands dirty in the kitchen, I always found success and great satisfaction.” 




Caption

By the age of 21, Erroi was already working professionally in Florence. After nearly a decade honing his craft in Italy, he moved to Dubai in 2017. Since then, he has led pastry programs at top-tier restaurants including Rue Royale and Cipriani. Today, he heads the pastry team at CÉ LA VI Dubai, a restaurant featured in the city’s Michelin Guide for three consecutive years. 

Erroi was recently shortlisted for Pastry Chef of the Year by the Hotel and Catering Awards.  

When you started out, what was the most common mistake you made?  

If there’s one thing I’ve always struggled with — not just in the kitchen, but in life — it’s patience. I always wanted to finish everything as quickly as possible, but still perfectly. This has been one of my biggest challenges, because pastry — especially baking — requires time. Long resting periods, fermentation and proofing are what give flavor, texture and structure to the best products. A mousse that hasn’t rested long enough will be too runny, and dough that hasn’t been rested long enough will lack flavor. That’s how I’ve come to master the ancient art of patience. 




CÉ LA VI Dubai. (Supplied)

What’s your top tip for amateurs?  

When it comes to pastry, the most common mistake is always the same: precision. Pastry is a perfect balance, an alchemy based on carefully selected and precisely measured ingredients. Many amateurs get the measurements wrong out of haste or distraction, or they replace ingredients or alter quantities as they please, which inevitably leads to disappointing results. 

My mother, for example, has the bad habit of reducing the amounts of butter or cream in my recipes. She’s very health-conscious and always afraid of overdoing it. But without fail, the result never satisfies her, and she always asks the same questions: “Federico, why are these cookies so hard?” or “Why is this cream flavorless?” or “Why is this mousse so runny?” And my response is always the same: “Mom, are you sure you followed the recipe?”  

Desserts aren’t always healthy. They are indulgences and guilty pleasures. We can absolutely enjoy them, as long as it’s in moderation. 




CÉ LA VI Dubai. (Supplied)

What one ingredient can instantly improve any dish? 

Any dish, if made with care, passion and — above all — love, will never disappoint. And maybe it’s the love we put into cooking that gets passed on to the ingredients we touch and makes our meal a moment of pure pleasure. That’s probably why your mom’s or grandma’s food always tastes the best. Then again, maybe a good quality vanilla or a pinch of salt — a contrast to the sweetness in pastry — is the real secret ingredient. 

When you go out to eat, do you find yourself critiquing the food?  

I’m simply grateful to share that moment with the people around the table. What scares my friends and family most when they cook for me is the fear of being judged, but I always tell them this: “For those of us who work in kitchens, just sitting at a table with loved ones is already a wonderful meal, because we’re used to eating in a rush, standing up or sitting on a cardboard box in a kitchen corner, alone, at odd hours, or while working.” 

What’s your favorite cuisine or dish to order?  

I always like to try something new — something beyond my culinary culture or dishes that require complex preparation that I can’t replicate at home. Sometimes, I just enjoy a perfectly executed croissant or a pizza baked in a wood-fired oven. As for desserts, I prefer to stick with the classics — a good tiramisu or quality gelato.

What’s your go-to dish if you have to cook something quickly at home?  

Probably pasta with cherry tomatoes, basil and parmesan. If I need a quick dessert, I’ll make a tiramisu, a passion fruit panna cotta or a chocolate soufflé. What do these recipes have in common? Simplicity. Just a few ingredients, each carefully selected and blended or cooked in a way that creates a dish with a unique flavor. 

What customer request or behavior most annoys you? 

Cooking in a restaurant also means learning to accept criticism, to really listen to what customers say, and to understand their preferences. It’s not always easy to accept certain comments like “This chocolate mousse is too airy” or “This dessert is too sweet or too bitter,” because everyone has their own palette. But sometimes, feedback, if listened to and understood, can genuinely help us improve. That’s why I always stay open to customer opinions, whether positive or negative. In fact, I’m often more interested in the negative feedback, because it’s from that input that I’ve been able to create new ideas or improve dishes I thought were already perfect. The truth is, in this profession, you never truly “arrive.” There’s always something more to learn. 

What’s your favorite dish to make? 

Panettone. It’s one of those desserts made with just a few ingredients: sourdough starter, water, flour, butter, eggs and sugar, along with raisins and candied orange. But making it is a true magic act that starts with the sourdough itself, a simple mixture of water and flour that’s fermented and refreshed daily for at least three months. This creates a colony of bacteria that will make the panettone rise and give it a unique, unrepeatable flavor, as the bacteria’s development depends on the surrounding temperature, the water used, and good microbes in the working environment. Only when the sourdough is ready can we proceed with the first dough, mixing the starter with water, flour, sugar, butter and eggs. 

This rests for 12 hours, followed by the final dough with the remaining ingredients. Then, after another six-hour rest, we reach the magical moment of baking, the moment of truth, where, based on the final volume, we truly understand whether all the previous steps were done perfectly, or if we made mistakes in temperature, fermentation or even the pH of our precious star ingredient, the sourdough starter. 

As a head chef, what are you like? 

I believe I’ve changed a lot over the years. I love teaching and sharing everything I’ve learned. I have no secrets — there truly are none, even if some professionals still claim otherwise. I always try to motivate my team and keep morale high, especially when the work hours get longer and more stressful. Today, I consider myself a very patient person — maybe thanks to this beautiful profession. I’ve never raised my voice in the kitchen, never insulted or scolded anyone. I firmly believe that kindness and good manners are the foundation of any relationship, and they can truly make a difference in the workplace. 

Chef Federico’s pineapple creme brûlée  

Ingredients for the coconut pastry cream:  

Coconut milk 350 g 

Coconut cream 50 g 

Sugar 1 38 g 

Lime zest 1/2 pc  

Sugar 2 38 g  

Salt 0.6 g  

Flour 32 g  

Corn starch 12 g  

Egg yolk 80 g  

Method:  

Mix coconut milk, coconut cream, sugar 1, lime zest in a pot and bring to a boil. 

In a separate bowl mix sugar 2, salt, flour, starch, egg yolk till powder is completely absorbed avoiding the lumps formations. 

Pour hot liquid onto the egg mix and bring back on fire stirring continuously till first bubble appear. 

Pour in a terrine and let it set covered with cling film on touching the cream (to avoid skin formation). 

When is completely cold mix till creamy texture and pour it onto the pineapple compote into the pineapple cup. 

Coat the surface with sugar and brulee till golden dark brown. 

Ingredients for the pineapple compote:  

Pineapple juice 100 g 

Sugar agar agar 10 g  

Finely chopped pineapple 100 g 

Method: (One portion 70 g of compote) 

Take a whole pineapple, cut off the leaf and slice it into three thick slices horizontally. 

With a spoon or a scooper scoop off the pulp creating a cup. 

Warm up the juice to 40°. 

Mix sugar and agar and add to pineapple juice. 

Boil for one min. 

Let it set in the chiller and blend it nicely. 

Add pineapple chopped and mix. 

Spread it evenly inside the pineapple cup. 


All’s unfair in love and war — Olivia Colman and Benedict Cumberbatch clash in ‘The Roses’

All’s unfair in love and war — Olivia Colman and Benedict Cumberbatch clash in ‘The Roses’
Updated 19 September 2025
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All’s unfair in love and war — Olivia Colman and Benedict Cumberbatch clash in ‘The Roses’

All’s unfair in love and war — Olivia Colman and Benedict Cumberbatch clash in ‘The Roses’

DUBAI: Jay Roach’s take on Warren Adler’s acrid 1981 novel “The War of the Roses” may be less overtly savage than the 1989 adaptation starring Michael Douglas and Kathleen Turner, but it still lands plenty of punches.

Roach trades open marital warfare for a more contemporary clash of egos and expectations, infusing the story with sharp humor and modern-day sensibilities. 

Two great British actors — Olivia Colman and Benedict Cumberbatch — anchor the film as Ivy and Theo Rose, whose seemingly ideal relationship implodes inside their sleek, custom-built dream home. Colman gives a layered, hysterically funny performance, while Cumberbatch captures Theo’s hurt pride and resentment as Ivy’s almost-dead career as a chef gets revitalized just as his, as an architect, nosedives overnight due to a freak catastrophe. The couple must navigate a new power dynamic within a previously loving relationship. 

Roach and screenwriter Tony McNamara keep the dialogue sharp and darkly comic. The movie kicks off with an imploding couples-therapy scene that turns gratitude lists into barbed attacks. 

Colman balances dry humor with quiet fury, and Cumberbatch moves seamlessly from bubbling hurt to explosive rage, making the breakdown of the Roses’ marriage both believable and extremely riveting.

The rest of the cast is stacked with talent too, though they’re mostly sidelined. Andy Samberg and Kate McKinnon play Barry and Amy, a couple whose physical chemistry is all but dead. And Jamie Demetriou’s Rory and Zoe Chao’s Sally bottle up resentment after resentment, while Allison Janney gives a singularly vicious performance as a divorce lawyer. But it’s the leads who hold the focus throughout.

Coming in at under two hours, “The Roses” moves briskly. Roach’s update is less a remake than a reimagining — one that recognizes how contemporary ambition and shifting gender roles can destabilize even the most loving and chemistry-packed marriage. But it fails to deliver the no-holds-barred meanness of the original and, in the process, loses some of its soul.

For audiences seeking sharp dialogue and sensational acting, though, “The Roses” delivers. Colman and Cumberbatch turn a familiar tale of marital collapse into a darkly amusing battle of wills that is worth seeing.


Who’s who at Azimuth 2025 

Who’s who at Azimuth 2025 
Updated 19 September 2025
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Who’s who at Azimuth 2025 

Who’s who at Azimuth 2025 
  • A rundown of some of the must-see acts at this year’s festival, which runs Sept. 25 and 26 in AlUla 

London Grammar 

Who: UK indie-pop band founded by vocalist Hannah Reid and guitarist Dan Rothman in the late Noughties and also including keyboardist and percussionist Dominic Major. They picked up a prestigious Ivor Novello Award for Best Song Musically & Lyrically in 2014 for “Strong” and that same year won Independent Breakthrough of the Year and Most Played New Independent Act at the AIM Independent Music Awards. Speaking to Esquire earlier this year, Reid explained her ambitions for what people would take from the band’s music and live shows. “I hope that people come away feeling connected,” she said. “I feel quite disconnected sometimes and it’s very easy to disappear behind a phone screen and feel really isolated from each other. I think music is an incredible way to create amazing memories with your friends and your family and feel connected to something bigger than yourself.” 

Top tracks: “Strong,” “Wasting My Young Years,” “Hey Now,” “Baby It’s You” 

Nemahsis 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by nemahsis (@nemahsis)

Who: Palestinian-Canadian singer-songwriter Nemah Hassan, who first found fame online as a beauty and fashion influencer who occasionally uploaded videos of herself performing covers before turning her hand to writing her own material. So far, it’s gone pretty well; her 2024 debut album “Verbathim” won the Juno Award (the Canadian equivalent of the Grammys) for Alternative Album of the Year. “I feel like everything is so cliché, especially in the world of toxic positivity and therapy talk and stuff like that,” she told The Creative Independent in May. “What should people take away from my music? I think that the most important people were once underdogs. I think when we look at the names that we know way beyond their deaths, they were underdogs and hated at one point.”  

Top tracks: “Stick of Gum,” “Immigrant’s Tale,” “Suicide,” “Eleven Achers” 

Dish Dash 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by IN ACT (@inact_live)

Saudi DJs and music producers, brothers Hassan and Abbas Ghazzawi are pioneers in the Kingdom’s electronic music scene. “We don't confine ourselves to any specific genre; instead, we embrace the freedom to explore different styles. That's what makes us stand out. It's not just about being good, it's about being special,” Hassan told Scene Noise in 2024. After performing at Azimuth in 2022, he told Arab News: “It’s a dream come true for us to actually have the power to influence and show the world what Saudi is and how we actually come together and enjoy our time in locations like these.” 

Top tracks: “Chromosome (edit),” “Daze,” “Disko Luv” 

Zeyne 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by zeyne | زين (@zeyne)

Who: Jordanian-Palestinian indie-pop star who lists Billie Eilish, Dua Lipa, and Rosalia among her influences. Since starting her YouTube channel during the COVID-19 lockdowns, Zeyne has established herself as one of the leading lights in the Middle East’s independent scene. “One of my goals is to be unapologetic in showcasing who I am as an Arab female artist living in the 21st century, living in Jordan, going through the struggles that many do,” she told Scene Noise in 2023. “Why not talk to other women and resonate with them? It’s partly society’s influence on us: we’re always used to being silent and not having a safe space to speak and express what we want.”  

Top tracks: “Balak,” “Asli Ana,” “Hilwa,” “Mesh Haseebek” 

Bedouin Burger 

Who: Duo consisting of Syrian singer Lynn Adib and Lebanese musician Zeid Hamdan, one of the most influential figures in Arabic alternative music, perhaps best known as one half of the trip-hop duo Soapkills. Their music blends classical Arabic poetry, Egyptian pop, analog synths, acoustic recordings and drum machines. “I needed to work with someone who knows what he wants to say in music and definitely know how to do it on a technical level,” Adib told Arab News in 2020. “We meet in the middle between our two worlds. I’m very much into experimental and improvised music and Zeid helps me put my ideas in a more readable way.”  

Top tracks: “Taht El Wared,” “Nomad,” “Ya Man Hawa” 

Shkoon 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by Shkoon (@_shkoon)

Who: Syrian vocalist Ameen Khayer and German musician Thorben Diekmann met in Hamburg, Germany, where Khayer had arrived as a refugee, and formed Shkoon in 2015. Their music blends traditional Arabic sounds with electronica, piano, violin and percussion. “We do it to prove there are no borders,” Khayer told Arab News in 2020. “No matter where you come from, music is going to connect us.”  

Top tracks: “Lala,” “Napauken,” “Fatoum” 

Mind Against 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by Mind Against (@mindagainst)

Who: Berlin-based Italian EDM duo — brothers Alessandro and Federico Fognini — who released their first single, “Cagliostro,” in 2012. Since then, their joint DJ sets have made them wildly popular around the world. Speaking to xlr8r.com, the pair outlined their approach to their live shows. “We don’t plan much, but we do have six or seven tracks we know we want to play or moments that we like to create during a set. We don’t have separate roles; both of us have access to effects, controls. We like to keep two or three tracks together and mix tracks with four hands so it’s a continuous working together for all the duration of our performances.” 

Top tracks: “Walking Away,” “Colossal,” “Astral” 

Kevin de Vries 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by Drumcode (@drumcoderecords)

Who: German DJ and producer of “hybrid techno” music who released his first track in 2015. According to Resident Advisor, “Kevin’s DJ sets translate the singular energy of his own music into extended journeys from cutting-edge sounds to 90s classics and back again. He has become an in-demand DJ worldwide, consistently delivering stand-out performances for huge festivals and intimate clubs alike.”  

Top tracks: “Metro,” “Dance With Me,” “Saga,” “Tokyo Nights” 


Recipes for success: Chef Balveer Balkissoon offers advice and a tasty sea scallops recipe

Recipes for success: Chef Balveer Balkissoon offers advice and a tasty sea scallops recipe
Updated 19 September 2025
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Recipes for success: Chef Balveer Balkissoon offers advice and a tasty sea scallops recipe

Recipes for success: Chef Balveer Balkissoon offers advice and a tasty sea scallops recipe

DUBAI: Over his 20-year career, Mauritian chef Balveer Balkissoon has honed his skills across European, African, and Asian cuisines in his homeland, the Seychelles, Oman, and the UAE.  

Today, as culinary director of the UAE at Groupe Barrière, Balkissoon oversees a diverse portfolio of restaurants including Paradiso Abu Dhabi, Art Lounge, Tazu by Art Lounge, Museum Café and the French brasserie Fouquet’s at the Louvre Abu Dhabi.  

His work has contributed to the inclusion of several of these venues in the Michelin Guide and Gault&Millau. 

French brasserie Fouquet’s at the Louvre Abu Dhabi. (Supplied)

When you started out, what was the most common mistake you made? 

I tended to over-marinate or add too many ingredients to high-quality products like a beautiful cut of beef or fresh fish. I’ve learned that the best ingredients require minimal intervention. A chef’s role is to highlight and respect the natural flavor of the product, not mask it. 

What’s your top tip for amateur chefs? 

Always cook with your heart and trust your senses, especially your palate. Don’t stress if things don’t go perfectly. Cooking is a personal journey, not a performance. 

What’s one ingredient that can instantly improve any dish? 

For me, onions are essential. They’re a foundational ingredient that builds depth and enhances the flavor profile of almost any dish. 

French brasserie Fouquet’s at the Louvre Abu Dhabi. (Supplied)

When you go out to eat, do you find yourself critiquing the food?  

Yes, I naturally analyze what I eat. It’s second nature.  

What’s the most common issue that you’ve noticed in other restaurants? 

Poor seasoning. Without proper seasoning, a dish can’t express the full potential of its ingredients. 

What’s your favorite cuisine or dish to eat? 

Being from Mauritius, I always gravitate towards fresh fish, prepared in any style. I enjoy the simplicity and the purity of flavor that comes with well-prepared seafood. And, naturally, it reminds me of home. 

What’s your go-to dish if you need to cook something quickly at home? 

Spaghetti aglio e olio. It’s simple, quick and packed with flavor — just garlic, chili and olive oil. It’s a classic comfort dish that never disappoints. 

Mauritian chef Balveer Balkissoon has a 20-year career. (Supplied)

What’s a common customer request that annoys you? 

When someone asks for a Wagyu MB9 tenderloin or ribeye to be cooked well-done. It defeats the purpose of using such a premium cut. You lose all the richness, marbling and tenderness that make it special. 

What’s your favorite dish to cook? 

I’ve created a signature recipe for braised beef cheeks — slow-cooked for 48 hours until they’re melt-in-your-mouth tender. It’s a dish that requires patience, technique, and a deep respect for the ingredient. And you only need a spoon to eat it. 

What’s the most difficult dish for you to get right? 

A good risotto. The challenge lies in expectation; every culture has a different idea of the perfect texture. So, getting it “right” depends on who you’re serving. It’s a dish that’s both technically and culturally nuanced. 

As a head chef, what are you like? 

I’d say I’m a democratic leader. That said, I believe discipline is non-negotiable, especially in our industry. Food safety and consistency require structure, accountability, and focus from every member of the team. 

Chef Balveer’s pan-seared sea scallops with creamy fregola, parmesan, pears and garlic aioli 

Chef Balveer’s pan-seared sea scallops with creamy fregola, parmesan, pears and garlic aioli. (Supplied)

Ingredients: 

Scallops 

Fresh sea scallops (U10 size): 16 pcs (approx. 30g each, total 480g) 

Neutral oil (grapeseed or canola): 15ml 

Unsalted butter: 20g 

Salt & black pepper: to taste 

Fregola pasta base 

Fregola sarda (medium): 200g 

Shallot (finely chopped): 30g 

Garlic (minced): 5g 

Vegetable or chicken stock: 500ml 

Olive oil: 15ml 

Salt: to taste 

Parmesan cream 

Heavy cream (35%): 200ml 

Parmigiano Reggiano (freshly grated): 60g 

White pepper: a pinch 

Nutmeg (freshly grated): a pinch 

Pear brunoise 

Firm pear (e.g., Williams): 1 large (180g) 

Lemon juice: 5ml 

Unsalted butter: 10g 

Light brown sugar: 5g 

Garlic aioli 

Egg yolk: 1 

Roasted garlic cloves: 2 cloves 

Dijon mustard: 5g 

Lemon juice: 10ml 

Olive oil: 50ml 

Neutral oil (sunflower or grapeseed): 50ml 

Salt: to taste 

Garnish (optional) 

Pea sprouts: 8g 

Vene cress: 4g 

Extra virgin olive oil: for finishing 

Preparation: 

Parmesan cream 

In a saucepan, bring cream to a light simmer. 

Stir in parmesan until melted and smooth. 

Add white pepper and nutmeg to taste. Keep warm. 

Fregola pasta 

In a medium pot, heat olive oil and sweat shallots and garlic without colouring. 

Add fregola, gradually add warm stock, stirring occasionally like risotto, until al dente (12–15 minutes). 

Fold in half the parmesan cream to coat. Reserve the rest for plating. 

Sautéed pears 

Peel and dice pear into small brunoise. 

In a sauté pan, melt butter, add pear, lemon juice, and sugar. 

Gently cook 3–4 minutes until just tender. Keep warm. 

Garlic aioli 

Whisk egg yolk, roasted garlic, mustard, lemon juice until smooth. 

Slowly emulsify with oils until creamy. 

Season with salt, place in a squeeze bottle or piping bag. 

Scallops 

Pat scallops dry and season with salt and pepper. 

Heat neutral oil in a non-stick or cast-iron pan over high heat. 

Sear scallops 1.5–2 minutes per side until golden brown. 

Add butter, baste, then rest off-heat for 1 minute. 

Plating: 

1. Base layer – Fregola nest 

Spoon 2–3 tablespoons of creamy fregola into the center of the plate. 

Using the back of a spoon, gently swirl it into a 10–12 cm round to form the base. 

2. Parmesan cream 

Spoon a small amount of warm, reserved Parmesan cream around and within the fregola nest. 

This adds gloss and extra creaminess to the dish. 

3. Scallops 

Place 4 seared scallops on top of the fregola, slightly off-center. 

Arrange them in a loose square or diamond layout. 

4. Garlic aioli 

Using a piping bag or squeeze bottle, pipe 4–5 small pearls of garlic aioli around the scallops. 

Place them asymmetrically for visual interest. 

5. Pear brunoise 

Sprinkle a few spoonfuls of pear brunoise across the fregola. 

Allow some to remain visible around the scallops for color and texture contrast. 

6. Garnish 

Add pea sprouts and vene cress using kitchen tweezers (optional). 

Position them over and around the scallops for vertical dimension and freshness. 

7. Final touch 

Finish with a light drizzle of extra virgin olive oil over the fregola and scallops just before serving. 


Jameel Arts & Health Lab stages NYC festival alongside UN General Assembly 

Jameel Arts & Health Lab stages NYC festival alongside UN General Assembly 
Updated 19 September 2025
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Jameel Arts & Health Lab stages NYC festival alongside UN General Assembly 

Jameel Arts & Health Lab stages NYC festival alongside UN General Assembly 

JEDDAH: The Jameel Arts & Health Lab — a collaboration between Saudi, US and UK organizations — is staging its annual UNGA Healing Arts Week festival in New York from Sept. 20 to 26, alongside the 2025 UN General Assembly and in collaboration with the World Health Organization.  

The festival, which will feature events in venues across New York, is centered, according to a press release, around “a bold new vision: to recognize arts engagement as a health behavior — on par with physical activity, nutrition, sleep, time in nature, and social connection.” 

Stephen Stapleton, a founding co-director of the lab, elaborated. “As the burden of health challenges grows, traditional healthcare systems — designed primarily to treat illness — are proving insufficient on their own,” he told Arab News. “Arts and health interventions can offer a complementary, preventive approach; one that builds community connection, strengthens resilience and engages directly with the broader determinants of health. By integrating these approaches into our health systems, the arts can become a vital health asset, supporting both individual and population well-being. 

“Over the past two decades, the arts and health evidence base has grown dramatically across clinical, population, and neuroscientific research,” he continued. “These include randomized controlled trials which have demonstrated efficacy in mental health, stroke rehabilitation, and palliative care.” 

Highlights of this year’s festival include a keynote speech from Daisy Fancourt, author of “Art Cure: The Science of How the Arts Save Lives”; a roundtable that will “explore social prescribing as a pathway to realizing the economic, clinical, and public health potential of the arts as a driver of care innovation and health equity”; a concert from Mexican-American jazz singer Magos Herrera “exploring music’s role in supporting emotional regulation, connection, and mental health”; a participatory session “exploring how theatre can build social connection, trust and coalition”; an interactive tour of the Metropolitan Museum of Art that includes an art-making workshop; and the unveiling of a photo essay for the Jameel Arts & Health Lab–Lancet Global Series on the Health Benefits of the Arts which will have its regional launch during next month’s Global Health Exhibition in Riyadh.  

Another of the lab’s co-directors, Prof. Nisha Sajnani, said in the release: “UNGA Healing Arts Week is about turning evidence into action — bringing together artists, educators, researchers, and policymakers to … embed creativity into the fabric of clinical and public health.” 


Where We Are Going Today: The Matcha Cup in Alkhobar

Where We Are Going Today: The Matcha Cup in Alkhobar
Updated 19 September 2025
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Where We Are Going Today: The Matcha Cup in Alkhobar

Where We Are Going Today: The Matcha Cup in Alkhobar

ALKHOBAR:  The Matcha Cup in Alkhobar is a dream come true for matcha lovers.

This spot specializes in matcha drinks, and you can taste the quality in every sip. The matcha is rich, flavorful, and perfectly frothed, making it smooth and velvety with just the right amount of creaminess. It is clear they use premium matcha powder, and that really elevates the experience.

One of the things visitors love about The Matcha Cup is the variety of milk options they offer. The range of options makes it easy to customize your drink exactly the way you like it. The cup design and overall branding are also stunning; minimal, chic, and Instagram-worthy, adding to the whole experience of ordering from them.

The setup is neither a full cafe nor a drive-thru. You have to park, get out of the car, and place your order. Considering how simple the concept is, it would be amazing if they at least offered car-side service, like other specialty trucks do, so you do not have to step out just to grab a quick matcha.

In terms of options, the menu is focused and does not have too many extras, but honestly, that works in their favor. By staying dedicated to matcha and keeping the concept simple, they maintain a very clear identity and deliver on quality. This could easily become one of the go-to spots in Alkhobar for anyone craving good matcha on the go.

For more information check their Instagram: @thematchacup.