I like to think that Mama Issa had breakfast at her favorite place this morning-right on the edge of the Mediterranean. Imagine the soft clatter of dishes, waves gently splashing against the thick rock wall separating Mama Issa from that turquoise water. She sips that good, strong Lebanese coffee and breathes in the scent of warm manouche bread mingling with the faint salt from the sea.
Maybe the electricity went out last night, maybe there will be strikes in the city this month. It doesn't bother Mama Issa; she's at peace. She's been through worse, and after all, her life's work is an unmitigated success.
Her phone buzzes on the table beside her. Maybe she doesn't even hear it at first, as a large wave hits the wall and mist swirls around her, kissing her face. But as the wave recedes, she picks up the phone and sees it's her daughter, Fatema, today's guest.
Decades ago, not far from this very spot, Mama Issa cradled Fatema close at Beirut airport, guiding her other children as missiles exploded around. She was leaving her home, her heart language, her husband, her community, and her friends.
They escaped the war, but life didn't get easier. However, with the support of her own mother and siblings, and driven by a vision for her children, she persevered. She gave them a life, a future, hope, education, worldly success-and more than anything, she gave them the lifeline she had received: an unbreakable bond with family.
Today, Fatema works with her brother, a restaurateur, at their newest venture in Washington, DC-Vera Cucina, a restaurant that celebrates a fusion of Lebanese and Mexican cuisines. The cultures share values of family and warm hospitality, a similar vibrancy in art and beauty, and the merging of their cuisines began with a wave of Lebanese immigration to Mexico in the late 19th century.
Fatema's recipe is a prime example of this fusion, developed side by side in the kitchen with Mama Issa and the chef of Vera Cucina. And in that collaboration, you see Mama Issa's dream fulfilled: her children working together, staying close, honoring their heritage, and creating something meaningful that carries their family forward.
So I imagine Mama Issa smiling as Fatema shares how guests are coming far and wide, asking for her lamb chops, tasting them, experiencing home-Mama Issa's home-and above all, family.

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Fatema Issa's Storied Recipe: Mama Issa's Lamb Chops
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- Eat at Fatema's Restaurant Vera Cucina in Washington D.C.
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