It’s early afternoon and Mahane Yehuda Market begins to glow green. In the middle of the week, Jerusalem shoppers are already planning their Shabbat menu. After a tiring arrival due to light rail disruptions, many are found between zucchini, green beans, yellow beans, and a bounty of spinach and broccoli — but the star is clear: okra
This year, the familiar okra appears in styles never seen before in this historic market. Next to the vendors lie the tough, mature pods; near the customers — the soft, tempting ones. But buyers aren’t always allowed to choose
In Mahane Yehuda 2025, post–Iran war era, okra comes in plastic trays and boxes — an unusual sight both for the vegetable and its fans. Near Abu Hassan’s store on Peri Hadash Street, a group of elegant young women with flawless nails stand by. They’re not buying. They won’t touch the sticky stuff
“There’s small okra, Egyptian, long or short,” says Abu Hassan. “I bring it from the Old City
From Southern Fields to Jerusalem Stalls
Though okra feels deeply Jerusalemite, it depends on serious buyers ready to cook it with beef, tomatoes, garlic, and lemon. Prices range between 30 to 40 shekels per kilo
Why is it so expensive
Gabi from Beit Yaakov Street, whose stalls overflow with herbs, tiny eggplants, and of course okra, explains: “All vegetables here were picked in Be’er Tuvia and the southern fields. Okra is delicate — it needs precise irrigation, daily harvesting, balanced pest control, and close manpower.” These weren’t consistently available since October 7. “Okra must reach the market the day after harvest — any delay hurts its quality
(Jerusalem’s Food Trucks Meet Rothschild-Style Urban Vibe)
Not a Childhood Taste – a Grown-Up Craving
Seasonality doesn’t care about price. Okra proudly enters the pot
It’s rich in iron, vitamin C, and fiber; it balances sugar, lowers cholesterol, and supports health. The secret? A quick fry before any cooking method — plus lots of garlic
At the “parliament” near the vegetable stand, you’ll hear familiar lines — the same ones about eggplants, fava beans, zucchini, or cauliflower. “It’s food for grown-ups, not for kids.” Kids want fries, hot dogs, burgers, falafel. But as we age, our tastes evolve. We — the adults who once hated vegetables except tomato or cucumber — now crave okra and the other field crops our moms cooked while we grimaced
Today, we wait for the season, pick okra like it’s a rare jewel — and gladly pay whatever it costs


