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A generous iftar at your table. Your chef prepares the full spread — dates, soups, meze, mains — so the evening belongs to the gathering, not the kitchen.
Private chef · Dubai
Ramadan iftar is not a dinner — it is a ritual that starts with dates and water, moves through a soup course, opens into a full spread of salads and meze, and then builds to the main meal. Getting all of it right, for a table of family and guests, while fasting through the day, is a significant undertaking. A private chef handles the preparation and lets you be present for the moment.
Iftar private chef spreads in Dubai are typically generous and abundant: harira or lentil soup to open, a full meze of traditional dishes, a main course of slow-cooked lamb, stuffed dishes, or rice-centred preparations, and Arabic sweets for dessert — qatayef, konafa, umm ali. Your chef will ask about the family's regional background and preferences. A Lebanese iftar is different from a Khaleeji one; a Syrian chef brings different reference points than an Egyptian one.
The timing is fixed by the call to prayer. Your chef arrives early, manages the preparation through the day (most iftar chefs are experienced with Ramadan schedules and understand the logistics), and has everything ready for the exact moment of iftar.
Real experiences
I booked for an anniversary and the chef quietly turned our flat into the best restaurant in town for one night. Worth every penny.
The live chat made it so easy — I described what I wanted and had three menus to choose from within the hour. No back-and-forth emails, no stress.
Hosted a big family lunch and didn't lift a finger. The kids had their own menu, my mother actually sat down to eat for once, and the kitchen was spotless after.
FAQ
Everything about booking a private chef for ramadan iftar & suhoor in Dubai.
Most iftar chefs arrive three to four hours before the call to prayer to handle preparation. Confirm the specific arrival time with your chef when booking — they're experienced with Ramadan schedules.
Yes. Some chefs offer combined iftar and suhoor bookings. If you need suhoor, mention it when booking — it changes the planning significantly and requires confirmation.
Yes. Tell your chef the regional background of the family — Khaleeji, Levantine, Egyptian, Yemeni — and they'll build an authentic spread accordingly.
Fifteen to thirty guests for a generous shared spread is typical. For larger family gatherings, discuss a chef team when booking.
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