Moroccan delicacies | The Press

(Trois-Rivières) This was somewhat to be expected. We asked chef Samy Benabed if his mother, with whom he had just had a Moroccan “family dinner” at the Auberge Saint-Mathieu, would cook a simple tagine for us. When she opened the door to her apartment, we were greeted by a traditional table overflowing with delicacies. The centerpiece was still simmering on the stove.


“I really like people. I am a generous woman,” declares the energetic mother of four grown children, as if we hadn’t already noticed that. The work that Amina practices today reconfirms this. She supports elderly people in their daily lives. One of them is also “converted” on her Moroccan cuisine, confides to us the head of the family, completely invested in her work since her return from Morocco, where she let the pandemic pass.

  • Amina welcomes us into her kitchen.

    PHOTO MARCO CAMPANOZZI, THE PRESS

    Amina welcomes us into her kitchen.

  • These rolls are stuffed with meat or fish.

    PHOTO MARCO CAMPANOZZI, THE PRESS

    These rolls are stuffed with meat or fish.

  • The tagine with artichokes and peas is Samy’s favorite.

    PHOTO MARCO CAMPANOZZI, THE PRESS

    The tagine with artichokes and peas is Samy’s favorite.

  • Taktouka is a cooked salad.

    PHOTO MARCO CAMPANOZZI, THE PRESS

    Taktouka is a cooked salad.

  • Tadam!

    PHOTO MARCO CAMPANOZZI, THE PRESS

    Tadam!

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It’s because the valiant has a project. She bought land in Tiflet, not far from her hometown of Salé, Morocco. She will build a house there that will accommodate the whole family and will plant a nourishing garden. In the meantime, she works and saves money to afford a comfortable retirement.

The same goes for her ex-husband, father of Samy, who has resumed his delivery shifts at Ti-Coq. Despite his degree in administration from the University of Trois-Rivières, Aziz Benabed has never managed to get hired in his field. For several years, he has worked during the beautiful Quebec season and spent his winters in Morocco.

Fortunately, in 2023, Samy Benabed lives a different reality than that of his parents. Certainly, as a child, he was not completely spared from racism, but today, the rising star is carving out a very good place for himself in the local gastronomic space, and even internationally.


PHOTO EDOUARD PLANTE-FRÉCHETTE, LA PRESS

Samy Benabed is chef and co-owner of Auberge Saint-Mathieu.

Named “Revelation of the Year” in the most recent Lauriers de la gastronomie québécoise last spring, the 31-year-old chef was also one of the 10 Canadian finalists for the prestigious Pellegrino Young Chef Academy. He won the “Food for Thought” public prize for his dish “Poule de silk ti-coq”, a tribute to Quebec rotisserie chicken and, of course, to his father.

Samy is very obviously a free electron. His fragmented journey has sowed many surprises. His mother saw him becoming a doctor when he did his CEGEP in biomedical analysis technology in Shawinigan. Then we imagined him as a great thinker while he studied philosophy at UQAM.

A second family

But it was in the kitchen of Samuel Pinard, in the late Dining Room, that he found his place. Then his passion for exceptional products “worsened” during the three years he spent alongside Marc-Alexandre Mercier, at the Hôtel Herman, another beautiful restaurant from which Montreal is still in mourning.

Inhabited by imposter syndrome, the young man registered with the Institute of Tourism and Hospitality of Quebec (ITHQ). “I did a session and a half, but I wasn’t really learning,” regrets Samy. They thought I was arrogant because I didn’t show up for all my classes. But I just wanted to learn. So I left. The irony is that the next year, they called me to give workshops in higher education. »

Second irony, when we join him at his mother’s house in Trois-Rivières, the chef has just returned from the ITHQ, where he has concocted a menu on the theme of Mauricie forest products. Samy clearly does not hold grudges, even if he never fails to highlight the contradictions in our institutions.

Cooking really turns me on, I never feel like I’m working. My colleagues have become my family, my friends. I wouldn’t find that while pursuing an academic career.

Samy Benabed, chef and co-owner of Auberge Saint-Mathieu

“Then all the fundamental questions that interest me are part of it: the ethics of relationships with colleagues and employees, the relationship with the product, the countless ways of doing things,” he adds. At the Auberge, we always question everything. »

  • The Inn Counter is a very recent addition.

    PHOTO EDOUARD PLANTE-FRÉCHETTE, LA PRESS

    The Inn Counter is a very recent addition.

  • Auberge Saint-Mathieu overlooks Lake Bellemare.

    PHOTO EDOUARD PLANTE-FRÉCHETTE, LA PRESS

    Auberge Saint-Mathieu overlooks Lake Bellemare.

  • The inn was built more than 25 years ago by Jean-Marcel Lacourse and Louise Trottier.

    PHOTO EDOUARD PLANTE-FRÉCHETTE, LA PRESS

    The inn was built more than 25 years ago by Jean-Marcel Lacourse and Louise Trottier.

  • Here, greenery is king.

    PHOTO EDOUARD PLANTE-FRÉCHETTE, LA PRESS

    Here, greenery is king.

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Four friends and an inn

It is with his childhood friend Nicholas Trottier-Lacourse, son of the former owners, Louise Trottier and Jean-Marcel Lacourse, and two other partners that the chef recently bought the Auberge Saint-Mathieu. Florent Borrel is a former customer, a great cheese connoisseur, now responsible for the Comptoir de l’auberge where they serve simple cuisine and wine. Étienne Prud’homme, who worked in the Joe Beef group and at the now defunct Pastel, is maître d’hôtel and responsible for the wine list. In the dining room and in the kitchen, the staff are dapper and passionate in their early twenties.

The Auberge illustrates well what makes Quebec gastronomy unique. It is often practiced without fuss, in the most unexpected places, like this rustic building on the lake, which has no ambition to become a Relais et Château or a Michelin-starred restaurant, even if its cuisine is completely up to par. the height. The place is dynamic. The team regularly organizes one-night dinners with friendly restaurants and even with the chef’s parents!

“The business plan includes several stages that we take at our own pace,” explains the man who began to tame the premises in the summer of 2020, but only took possession and launched the renovations in January 2023. For now , the value for money is unbeatable. It’s possible to get a room and an eight-course gourmet meal for two for around $400, before wine and tip.

Samy Benabed practices very aesthetic and careful cuisine, in the Nordic vein which he was imbued with during his internship at Relae in Copenhagen (closed in 2020) and while working at Mousso. But the chef’s creations aren’t just pretty. They are infused with emotion, sincerity and a certain taste nostalgia.

  • Samy's deconstructed vol-au-vent

    PHOTO TAKEN FROM THE INSTAGRAM ACCOUNT @AUBERGE.SAINTMATHIEU

    Samy’s deconstructed vol-au-vent

  • Great care is taken in the presentation of the dishes.

    PHOTO TAKEN FROM THE INSTAGRAM ACCOUNT @AUBERGE.SAINTMATHIEU

    Great care is taken in the presentation of the dishes.

  • The hidden trout

    PHOTO TAKEN FROM THE INSTAGRAM ACCOUNT @AUBERGE.SAINTMATHIEU

    The hidden trout

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In the menu that we had the pleasure of tasting, there was among others a vol-au-vent unrecognizable to the eye, but impeccably familiar to the taste buds. One of the two desserts was a divine reference to the PB & J sandwich (peanut butter and jam), deconstructed as follows: peanut mousse, raspberry ice cream and mouillette sprinkled with vinegar. Family history is also expressed in certain dishes. The lamb tartare as an appetizer is placed on a little khoubiza, a salad cooked with mallow.

“Little anecdote: before the French protectorate, Moroccans did not really have a last name. But from 1950, they were obliged to register one and my great-grandfather, not really knowing what to enter in his civil status certificate, chose the name of his favorite dish, khoubiza. So that’s my mother’s last name! »


PHOTO MARCO CAMPANOZZI, THE PRESS

Khoubiza is a cooked mallow salad (or spinach in this case).

During our visit, Amina obviously does not fail to prepare a khoubiza as a starter. “We eat it with bread, without utensils,” she insists when she sees us lift a fork. The same goes for the delicious taktouka (another cooked salad, this time made with tomatoes and peppers).

After the exquisite tagine, we are unfortunately in a hurry to return to Montreal, to take care of our own families. Amina therefore insists on filling my thermos with mint tea and wrapping a small square of cake for the photographer. On the doorstep, she puts a box of very soft dates in my arms. If that isn’t a great comfort, that!


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