Essaouira cooking class

Sat around Latifa’s family-home kitchen grating a fourth tomato for our vegetarian couscous, I came to realise that this experience was not just about an Essaouira cooking class, this was four women enjoying each other’s company and learning about our separate families and way of life.

I’m not a cook and have never really enjoyed cooking. In our time-constrained life in the UK, spending hours lovingly making a meal for my boys to gobble up in a matter of seconds just doesn’t rank high on my wish list. Although I do love food and I’m always happy for people to cook for me.

But with my mum opposite me sifting couscous with Latfia, the local lady teaching us how to cook a Moroccan feast, and her sister, Rachida, tending to the purposely-charcoaled aubergines behind, I realised how much I was enjoying it. There were no time constraints, it was a wonderfully relaxed environment, and I was genuinely touched how much Latifa opened up to us about her life as a business woman, mother, and wife in Morocco.

If you are looking for an Essaouira activity which provides you with an authentic insight into local life, an Essaouira cooking class is perhaps the best thing you can do.

Arriving to the kitchen

We climbed the two flights of stairs up to the kitchen and dining area of Latifa’s home. Her parents moved to Essaouira from the countryside when their children were of schooling age for a better education and built this family home. It’s really beautiful decorated in classic Moroccan tiles and furnishings.

There are other cooking classes in Essaouira that take place at a restaurant or hotel. But actually having a cooking class in someone’s home makes it all the more special and authentic.

Before we started preparing the food, we met Latifa’s sister, Rachida, who greeted us with biscuits and fresh mint tea, perfectly setting the relaxed ambience of the next few hours.

And there were indeed hours of food preparation ahead…

Get cooking

My main takeaway from this Essaouira cooking experience is the amount of time and care that goes into Moroccan cooking, and certainly the way Latifa does it. This is far from a rushed affair with meticulous preparation of numerous ingredients. It honestly makes a Christmas dinner look easy.

And after grating tomatoes, which I never even knew was a thing, I have a new appreciation of canned tomatoes and tubed puree. I’m sure the cooking purists amongst you will be shaking your heads thinking, ‘it’s not the same’. Well I actually beg to differ.

But the grating of carrots, tomatoes, garlic, fine chopping of olives, onions and lemon, steaming of couscous four times over with manual sifting and cooling in between, finely measured spices and a trillion other steps that I have since forgotten, all took place with a backdrop of no time constraints, allowing conversation to flow and providing a focus of creativity. Items could be left to cook whilst we prepped ingredients, with no timers buzzing or burnt smells warning. Although I’m sure this was mostly down to Latifa’s expertise; she’s been running these Essaouira cooking classes for quite some time now.

Latifa was also very patient with my rather obvious lack of culinary skills. I gave her quite the confused expression when she asked us to remove the centre of a carrot, but she patiently re-showed me, leaving me to it. Mum also learned how the way she’d sliced onions and apples for decades was perhaps not us to Latifa’s standards; it was really quite amusing.

But even though this was a cooking class, the experience went beyond food preparation. I was just enjoying the process and ambience, and it was lovely for my mum and I to spend relaxed time together away from husbands and kids.

I doubt I’d ever be able to recreate what we made that day in Latifa’s kitchen, but if you are so inclined to try again at home, Latifa will message you the ingredients and recipe.

How to book your Essaouira cooking class

Head to Latifa’s website to book your class. She’s very prompt on email, so if you don’t hear back from her within a day or two, there may be something wrong with her website (which is what I experienced). Or you can contact her via Instagram (@atifacookingclasses). Otherwise, feel free to email us, Explore Essaouira, and we will point you in the right direction.

Latifa can arrange class for couples and groups of all ages, and all days of the week.


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