Two chefs well known in Madison to those who love Mediterranean food opened a restaurant Monday in Middleton.
Mohammad Hinnawi, who had the Nile restaurant on Odana Road for nine years, and Sabi Atteyih, who owned the former Casbah Restaurant and Lounge on East Main St., off the Capitol Square, from 1999 until 2007, opened Taza, at 1900 Cayuga St.
Taza, which means “fresh” in Arabic, is in what used to be Compadres Mexican restaurant.
It was Atteyih who brought Hinnawi to Madison from Chicago 30 years ago to work for his mother at Lulu’s on Old University Avenue. Hinnawi was a chef and manager there for 20 years until the property got redeveloped.
Hinnawi said that Taza has the same menu as the Nile, which he sold in June 2020 because of COVID-19. New owners ran it as the Nile at first and then changed the name to Petra Bakery & Restaurant.
“No people wanted to work and I couldn’t handle it by myself,” said Hinnawi, who also had knee surgery then which made it so he couldn’t be on his feet for six months.
Sun Prairie woman charged with killing man in drunken-driving crash in Madison
A surface parking lot for Downtown lakefront? Really?
Developer proposes $150 million, 550-unit, low-cost housing project near Oscar Mayer
Wisconsin volleyball will play match at Kohl Center with eye on NCAA attendance record
At Dirty Dog Taphaus customers serve themselves by the ounce
Wisconsin football adding Mark D’Onofrio to coaching staff, report says
Man pretends to be asleep when 3 burglars enter his Far East Side house, Madison police say
Good news for Nile, Lulu’s and Casbah fans: Now there’s Taza
Truck driver finds body near highway in southern Dane County, authorities say
Madison School District proposes permanent ban on out-of-school suspension for elementary students
Hands on Wisconsin: Yahara Hills is getting recycled
Peanut Butter & Jelly Deli leaves State Street after less than a year
‘You just can’t admit that you screwed up,’ Judge John Roemer told man who police say later shot him dead
1 killed, 1 critically injured in UTV-vehicle crash in Jefferson County, authorities say
Madison man faces 6th OWI after driving wrong way on I-94 in Dane County in stolen vehicle, authorities say
Taza is open seven days a week with Atteyih, 58, covering for Hinnawi, 57, on his days off.
Hinnawi said Taza is not much different from the Nile. “Just the location is. There’s nothing really different.”
He said he didn’t use the Nile name because although it’s no longer in use, he sold it with the former restaurant.
Both Hinnawi and Atteyih are Palestinian. Hinnawi, who was born in Jerusalem, came as a refugee from Aman, Jordan, to Chicago in December 1989. He came to Madison in 1992 after Atteyih took out a newspaper ad in Chicago looking for a chef. Hinnawi had been a baker. “We’re partners now,” Hinnawi said.
“Mo and I are brothers from different mothers basically because of the long time that we worked at Lulu’s,” said Atteyih, adding that he was recruiting chefs in Chicago when he found Hinnawi.
Atteyih said he worked with others he found in Chicago with mixed results. “Some lasted a month, some lasted a year, but he lasted a couple of decades… We couldn’t get rid of him. And I know we didn’t want to get rid of him.”
Lulu’s opened in 1984 and Atteyih’s mother, Khayreia Ashkar, took it over upon her business partner’s death, Atteyih said. “In 1992, when I met Mo, we were basically learning as we went. None of us was culinarily educated… We learned some cooking from mom and were able to transform Lulu’s at the time to what became a new genre of food.”
Before Lulu’s, he said, there was no Mediterranean or Middle Eastern food in Madison. “We take pride in being the pioneers, bringing food such as Lulu’s did in 1984.”
After closing the Casbah, Atteyih worked as a distribution manager for the Wisconsin Union and in the Union’s commissary kitchen. He was also the chef for Saffron, a Mediterranean street food restaurant the Union used to run in the Wisconsin Institutes for Discovery.
Taza is open Sunday through Thursday 11 a.m. to 9 p.m., and Friday and Saturday 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. The telephone number is 608-203-8282. Atteyih said they should have a website with online ordering soon.
Atteyih said they’re talking with a recent Iraqi immigrant to do deliveries so they don’t have to contract with a third-party delivery service.
39 Madison-area restaurant, bar and coffee shop openings in 2021, including more on the way