Most people keep olive oil next to the stove. They use it for one thing; frying an egg, dressing a salad and then they move on with their day.
We think that is a waste of a beautiful bottled heritage.
Maknoon was never meant to live in one corner of the kitchen. The trees it comes from are the oldest cultivated olive trees in the world; some of them, in the hills of South Lebanon, were already ancient when the Phoenicians sailed their oil across the Mediterranean sea. An oil with that kind of memory does not belong only in a pan. It belongs in the moments you would not expect.
This is the first volume of The Living Pantry; a Maknoon series dedicated to discovering the surprising journeys a good olive oil can take you on. These volumes are not static; they breathe and shift with the harvest, the weather, the origin, and the country. Some of these will feel obvious the moment you try them. While some recommendations may feel familiar, others serve as a subtle tribute to the traditional heritage kitchen, for today’s modern recipes.
1. On vanilla ice cream, with sea salt
This is the one that converts people. Our eyes light up every time we taste it.
Take a scoop of good vanilla ice cream. Drizzle a generous drizzle of a Maknoon Classic Collection bottle over the top. Finish with a small pinch of Chilli Sea Salt. Eat it immediately, before the ice cream surrenders to the oil.
What you get is not olive-oil-flavoured ice cream. You get the cold cream, the warmth of the oil, the bright and tingly crunch of salt; three textures and three temperatures in one bite.
2. Stirred into your morning coffee
A teaspoon. That is all.
Stir it into a black coffee, espresso, drip, whatever you drink, and the oil will sit on the surface for a moment before melting in. The bitterness softens. The mouthfeel becomes round. You feel it longer, the way you feel ghee in a properly made tea.
Hanan and Iss started doing this on a slow morning in Dubai and have not stopped since. There is real science behind it (the polyphenols in fresh EVOO are fat-soluble, so a little oil helps your body absorb more of them), but the honest reason is that it tastes good.
3. On warm labneh, the way our grandmothers did
This is not unexpected if you grew up in the Levant. This is breakfast.
Spread fresh labneh on a plate. Make a small well in the centre. Pour Maknoon Olive oil into the well until it threatens to spill over. Tear ‘khebez’ with your hands and drag it through both. If you have za’atar nearby, this is its moment. Top it with a sprig of mint, a sprinkle of grenadine, to add a little extra bite. Or keep it simple with a sprinkle of our Halabi Zaatar on top.
In Aleppo, in Beirut, in the villages of the Bekaa, this plate has been the same for centuries. The olive oil is the reason.
4. As a finishing rain over chocolate mousse
Chocolate mouse. A pour of Maknoon’s Palestine Classic Olive Oil. A few flakes of sea salt; chilli sea salt is our favorite for this. Eat it standing in the kitchen, or with your guests as a dessert.
The fruitiness of the oil lifts the cocoa. The cocoa frames the oil. The chilli adds a tingly finish.
5. Over orange cake
Make an orange cake, the way our grandmothers used to. Top it with slices of dried orange, and top it with a generous pour of Maknoon Classic Collection Olive Oil.
The oil coats your tongue first; the orange arrives second. This combination captures the essence of a Levantine spring in each mouthful.
6. As the entire dressing for a fresh tomato
A ripe tomato. A thick slice. A heavy pour of Maknoon. Sea Salt. That is the recipe.
This is not a dish that needs anything else. It is a test of your oil. If the tomato tastes more like itself afterwards, you have a good oil. If it tastes flat or greasy, you have the wrong one.
8. A tablespoon, every morning
Our grandparents did this. Today’s lemon and olive oil shot trend started years ago, with the previous generations.
This simple, daily ritual is a foundation of Levantine wellness. A single spoonful is deeply nourishing: it is known to support gut motility and provide lasting cardiovascular benefits, while its healthy fats help sustain steady energy and promote a feeling of fullness throughout the morning.
Why this series exists
The Living Pantry is not a static list of products or recipes; it is a concept of perpetual motion, a mirror of the olive oil’s own life cycle. This philosophy is inherently woven into the olive oil harvest; since the oil is a seasonal, living, and purely organic product, it evolves alongside the weather, its geographical origin, and each year’s specific yield. Because nature refuses to yield the same flavor twice, we invite you to join us on this continuous, honest journey. The Living Pantry is an invitation to stop saving Maknoon for special occasions, but to recognize the divine in the daily ritual and make the occasions yourself.
Next month, we will write about the 5L tin, and the Levantine philosophy of always having enough.
Until then, pour generously.
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