Personal Taste Kurdish May 2026

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.”

She lingered. “What is it?”

He shaped the kuba by hand—each oval a small vessel for the spiced meat. He boiled them in a broth of tomato and dried mint, the way his father liked, though his father was gone now. The first time he had made this in Berlin, he had used canned tomatoes. Rojin would have thrown the ladle again. This time, he had waited for August, bought fresh Turkish tomatoes from the man on Kottbusser Damm, boiled and peeled them himself. personal taste kurdish

He hadn’t forgotten. He had buried it under schnitzel and döner and the efficient blandness of survival.

He ate a second. Then a third.

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

It was Rojin’s birthday. Not his wife—his memory of a wife. She had stayed behind in Qamishli when he fled. They had married young, in a garden heavy with the smell of rain on dry soil. She had cooked him kuba , the fine bulgur shells stuffed with spiced meat and chard. He had told her it was too salty. She had thrown a ladle at his head. He had laughed. Now, in their small Prenzlauer Berg kitchen, he

He added the zhir . That was the key. Outside of Kurdistan, people called it “wild oregano” and used it sparingly. But Hewa crushed a fistful into the meat. The scent exploded—pine, earth, a hint of clove, something green and stubborn that grew on mountains where borders were just lines on someone else’s map.