Personal - Taste Kurdish

When the kuba floated to the surface, glossy and fragrant, Hewa ladled one into a bowl. No spoon. He ate it the way he had as a boy: with his fingers, burning his lips, breaking the shell to let the broth soak into the meat.

Now, in their small Prenzlauer Berg kitchen, he opened the cardboard box that had arrived last week from his sister in Sulaymaniyah. Inside: a plastic jar of doh (dried yogurt balls), a packet of savory (that wild, sharp herb they called zhir ), and a handwritten note: “You forgot your taste, brother.”

His neighbor, Frau Schmidt, knocked on the door. “Everything all right? It smells… very strong.” personal taste kurdish

He looked at the bowl. The last kuba sat in a pool of red broth, a single pine nut resting on its curve like a dark pearl.

He soaked the bulgur. He minced lamb shoulder with a knife, not a machine, because texture was memory. He fried pine nuts in butter until they turned the color of aged parchment. The kitchen filled with smoke and the ghost of his mother’s voice: “More pepper, coward.” When the kuba floated to the surface, glossy

The taste hit him not in his mouth but in his chest.

He typed back: “I remember everything. But your kuba was never this good. You used too much salt.” Now, in their small Prenzlauer Berg kitchen, he

He had been in Berlin for four years. Long enough to learn the S-Bahn map by heart, to stop flinching at sirens, to order a cappuccino without stumbling over the “ch.” But not long enough to forget. Every evening, he walked past a Turkish grocer on Kottbusser Damm, and every evening, the baskets of green peppers and lemons outside tugged at a thread in his chest.

It wasn’t the smell of gunpowder or diesel that defined Hewa’s memory of home. It was the scent of smoked eggplant and wild thyme, crushed between his mother’s fingers.

Hewa smiled for the first time in four years. He covered the remaining kuba and set aside a bowl for Frau Schmidt. Then he went to the window and looked east, toward a city he could not see but could taste—on his lips, in his throat, in the stubborn, wild herb that no border could season away.