Kubideh Kitchen Skype Meal

Conflict Kitchen, founded in 2010 by Jon Rubin and Dawn Weleski, is a restaurant in Pittsburgh that serves cuisine from countries with which the United States is in conflict. Each iteration is augmented by events, performances, publications, and discussions that expand public engagement with the culture, politics, and issues at stake within the focus region. The restaurant rotates identities in relation to geopolitical events and, since its opening, introduces the cuisines of Iran, Afghanistan, Cuba, North Korea, Venezuela, and Palestine.
Kubideh Kitchen, the first iteration of Conflict Kitchen, is an Iranian take-out restaurant serving kubideh in freshly baked barbari bread with onion, mint, and basil. The sandwich is packaged in a custom-designed wrapper featuring interviews with Iranians in both Pittsburgh and Iran, addressing topics ranging from food and poetry to contemporary political conditions.
Kubideh Kitchen Skype Meal, conceived by Sohrab Kashani and Jon Rubin, takes place simultaneously in Pittsburgh and Tehran. Diners in both cities sit around long tables connected via webcam, forming an international dinner party. Each city prepares identical recipes and shares food and conversation. Guests are seated at tables that extend into live projected video of the other city’s table and meal. Conflict Kitchen and Sazmanab host the second annual live city-to-city dinner party.
The event is filmed by Al Jazeera for distribution on Arabic-language channels.
Venue: Sazmanab (Sazman-e Ab St.), The Blue Room of the Shadow Lounge [Pittsburgh]
Date: Saturday, April 28, 2012
Time: 8:30 PM (Tehran)
Time: Noon (Pittsburgh)



















