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Traveler Tip
            8    Bring plastic bags



                 For nights in the tented camp, store everything inside plastic bags.
            Otherwise, it will be covered in fine sand, even if there is no sandstorm. You can
            put small items inside a backpack and a large garbage bag around the pack.

                    —Stephanie Sweda, 4-time traveler, New York, NY
          9   Browse with your eyes, buy with your hands



               In the souks, if you touch an object, the merchant will interpret this as an
          invitation to barter. They can be very persistent, and may even walk alongside you
          to beyond their shop to continue extolling the object’s features and benefits.




                                  What to Eat



            Moroccan cuisine blends North African, Arabic, and southern European culinary
            traditions to create complex as well as delicate treats. Its iconic tagines are meat,
            poultry, seafood, and vegetable stews that take their name from the clay pots in which
            they are cooked. Try chicken and lemon tagine simmered with herbs, dried fruit, and
            olive oil. Another must is bstilla, a Fez specialty based on phyllo pastry layered with

            pigeon or chicken, almonds, sa ron, cinnamon and confectioners’ sugar.

            Turkish cuisine is o en ranked as one of the world’s top three (alongside French and
            Chinese). Get a good sampling when you order mezes, a platter of appetizers that
            may include yaprak sarma (grape leaves filled with rice, onion, mint, currants,
            peppers and cinnamon), sardalya (grilled sardines), deep-fried olives, and borek
            (phyllo pastry filled with cheese, minced meat, potato, or spinach). For sweets you
            must try dondurma, a frozen dessert—like ice cream that you eat with a knife and fork.
            Falafel (a fried chickpea fritter) is popular all over the Middle East, but Israel makes
            a reasonable claim to having the best. Israelis love to eat shakshuka, a tangy
            mélange of tomatoes, peppers, onions garlic and spices, topped with poached
            eggs. Known as the Palestinian national dish, maqlouba is a mouthwatering
            casserole of lamb, eggplant and rice.
            Try Egyptian ful, which is similar to hummus but made with fava beans. Koshari is
            a platter layered with long grain brown rice, lentils and macaroni topped with fried
            onions and a spicy tomato sauce. For a typical Egyptian dessert, try mahalabiya,
            a rosewater-flavored ground rice dish topped with toasted nuts and cinnamon.


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