
kisra & sharmout

karkadé pour

the communal tray

umm hassan's recipe

slow-braised lamb
Sudanese Catering · Washington D.C.
Bring Khartoum
to your table
Slow-braised lamb, simmered peanut stews, and hand-spread kisra bread — served in clay vessels that turn any gathering into a family feast.
— From the Earth
Ingredients with
memory and place
We source as close to origin as possible. When we can't, we find the closest diaspora market and ask the oldest person there.

Dried Hibiscus
Kassala, Eastern Sudan
Harvested after the rains. Steeped cold for 12 hours to pull the tartness without bitterness.
Fenugreek Seed
Northern State, Sudan
Toasted until golden before grinding. The bitterness disappears, leaving warm caramel and maple.

Sorghum Flour
Gezira State, Sudan
Fermented for three days before spreading on the griddle. The sourness is the point.

Tamarind Pod
Kordofan, Sudan
Soaked overnight and pressed through a sieve. Adds the sour depth that makes sharmout sing.
Whole Okra
White Nile State, Sudan
Dried in the sun, then rehydrated slowly. Never cut — the whole pod thickens the stew naturally.

Dried Lime
Imported via Omdurman market
Pierced and dropped whole into the broth. The hollow interior releases slow citrus over hours.
— Real Gatherings
Feasts we've had
the honor to make
From 30-person naming ceremonies to 200-guest weddings. We've fed them all from the same kitchen.

"The guests didn't stop talking about the lamb. Three weeks later, people are still asking for the caterer's number."
Hana Osman
Bride, Silver Spring MD

"Students who had never tasted Sudanese food were going back for thirds."
Tariq Al-Fadl
Howard University Cultural Society

"Finally something that wasn't sandwiches. The team actually lingered at lunch for once."
Marcus Webb
Operations Manager, Bethesda

"My mother cried when she tasted the shorba. She said it was exactly like back home."
Salma Idris
Khartoum-born, now Arlington VA
— Your Gathering Awaits
The cumin is cracked.
The tray is ready.
Tell us about your gathering and we'll build a feast around it — from a 20-person naming ceremony to a 300-guest wedding reception.
400+
Events catered
12k+
Guests fed
6
Years in DC
100%
Halal certified




