Ahmad Halawa
Diners are looking for new, exciting experiences. That’s where supper clubs fit in, with their secret locations, mystery menus and exclusive seating. Self-taught chefs like Ahmad Halawa, who hosts dinners in his backyard, are taking Dubai’s food scene by storm.
Rebecca Cairns/CNN
Halawa began hosting supper clubs in 2019 as a way to reconnect with his Palestinian heritage and share the authentic Levantine cuisine he grew up with. Strangers book their spot via Instagram, and are willing to pay over $100 per person to partake in his menus, which often include his famous knafeh (pictured), a traditional Arabic dessert.
@Splidu
Dragan Susa, a concept development chef at Emirates Flight Catering by day, began hosting the Supperclub Kouzina at his home in 2021. Susa uses the online platform Splidu to promote his events.
Dragan Susa
Born in Croatia, Susa’s family were forced to move around during the Yugoslav war which caused huge upheaval across the Balkan states throughout the 1990s. He lived in Serbia and Greece, which also influence his cooking style.
@Splidu
Susa uses his eight-course menu, starting at $110 per person, to showcase dishes from his childhood and share his personal story, mixing Balkan and Greek influences with seasonal ingredients available in Dubai. Susa says that supper clubs allow him to cook creatively and challenge himself.
@Splidu
Nicaraguan chef Gabriela Chamorro has run her popular Girl and the Goose Supper Club at her home for the past four years — and plans to soon open her own restaurant.
@Splidu
Chamorro’s dishes put a modern spin on Central American cuisine. In this dish, she experiments with pumpkin and truffle.
@Splidu
Self-taught cook Kuv Sharma has been a fixture of the city’s supper club scene for the past seven years and has created over 220 unique menus. To promote more interesting conversation, Sharma has banned three questions from his supper clubs: "What do you do?" "Where are you from?" and "How long have you been in Dubai?"
@Splidu
Each month, Sharma adopts a new theme, from “London Calling,” a creative take on British recipes with foreign ingredients, to a “Kuvisine” event in January 2023 (pictured) that highlighted the cuisines that most influenced his culinary journey.
@Splidu
Sharma doesn’t just host at home: in 2023, he collaborated with 25hours Hotel Dubai One Central to host a special edition of Kuv’s Secret Supper Club in one of the hotel’s intimate dining spaces.
@Splidu
Venezuelan chef Kiki Alvarez hosts her plant-based supper club at home as well as at Seva Table, a vegan café in Dubai (pictured).
@Splidu
Alvarez experiments with different flavors and textures, such as mushrooms, an ingredient featured heavily in her eight-course “Shroomotopia” menu (pictured).
@Splidu
Culinary couple Esteban Torregrosa and Andrea Melendez created the Don Bueno Supper Club, a celebration of Colombian cuisine, pictured here at the One Life Café at Dubai Design District.
@Splidu
The duo put their own twist on classic Colombian dishes, such as Tres Leches, a cake that combines three types of milk. Instead, Torregrosa and Melendez used rich coconut milk and a crunchy coconut crumble, served with tropical fruit and mango sorbet.

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CNN  — 

Dubai has so many restaurants, you could eat at a new one every day and it’d take you nearly 50 years to get through them all. Spoilt for choice with cuisines from all over the globe, it’s a wonder anyone in the city eats at home.

Yet people are shelling out to do just that. Not their own home, though: diners are handing over upwards of $80 to have complete strangers cook for them at “supper clubs.”

Supper clubs are set-menu dinners hosted by amateur or professional chefs. Diners often won’t know the menu or location of the dinner until after they book. People are encouraged to come alone, or with just one friend, providing a chance to network, and attendees can bring their own drinks.

The phenomenon isn’t new, or exclusive to Dubai, but it’s reached new heights in the city in the past year with dozens of experiences appearing in the underground dining scene.

“I wanted to bring people under one roof, at one table, get them to speak with no boundaries, and just share a nice meal and conversation,” says Palestinian chef Ahmad Halawa, who started his supper club in 2019, hosting dinners on weekends and juggling a full-time job in marketing.

At first, it was just friends and family coming along. But once word started to spread about Halawa’s delicious dishes, “I had strangers in my house, and people were booking their seats to come and join the experience,” he says.

People mostly find Halawa through word of mouth or on Instagram, and his events usually book out within two days. He quit his job in 2021, and now he hosts up to 30 guests twice a week in his backyard, decked out with an elegant banquet table, flower arrangements and fairy lights.

These strangers pay over $100 per person to partake in his creative Levantine menus, including his famous knafeh, a traditional Arabic dessert made with fine pasty and sweet soft cheese.

While great food is key to any dinner party, Halawa suspects that the social aspect of the supper clubs is buoying their appeal in Dubai, where around 90% of the population are foreigners.

“Most people are away from home, away from their families, so I wanted to create that sense of community that’s a bit distorted in Dubai,” he says, adding that his dinners are served family style at a communal table rather than plated per-person like at a restaurant.

“People miss that authenticity,” says Halawa. “(Supper clubs) give a more intimate, personal experience for the attendee.”

@Splidu
Supper clubs are trending in Dubai — such as Haya's Kitchen run by Haya Bishouty (pictured) — with more than 4,000 people attending events so far this year, according to Splidu.

Creative cooking

The soaring popularity of supper clubs in Dubai is, at least in part, due to some high-profile success stories. Pop-up restaurant Hawkerboi went from sell-out supper club events to opening a brick-and-mortar restaurant in the city last year.

Meanwhile, self-taught chef Neha Mishra’s passion for ramen garnered a cult following that turned her supper club — sold out six nights a week for three years — into a restaurant, Kinoya, in 2021. It ranked number 11 on the 50 Best Restaurants list for the Middle East and North Africa, was recognized by Michelin Bib Gourmand, and just opened a second outlet, in London.

Success stories like Mishra’s have inspired others to test the waters. Dragan Susa, a concept development chef at Emirates Flight Catering, began hosting supper clubs in 2021. While at work he spends more time in an office than a kitchen, his supper club gives him freedom to be creative.

Susa’s eight-course menu, starting at $110 per person, showcases dishes from his childhood in Croatia, Serbia and Greece, and shares his personal story, mixing Balkan and Greek influences with seasonal ingredients available in Dubai.

Like Halawa, he believes that the search for community is one of the big drivers of demand for these experiences.

“Dubai is a fast-moving city, people come in and out and they stay here for a year or two,” says Susa, adding that the clubs allow you to meet people outside of your profession, workplace, and existing friend group.

@Splidu
Chef Dragan Susa hosts his Kouzina Supper Club at his home.

Avid foodie Dave Luis attended his first supper club in July 2022, Kuv’s Secret Supper Club, and has attended many more since.

“I love dining out, but had become jaded with Dubai’s restaurant scene,” says the 50-year-old South African, now based in Dubai. “The idea of a supper club, in the chef’s home, felt so much more personal and memorable — an invitation to explore and experience dishes I’d not usually encounter at a restaurant.”

For Luis, the social aspect is as important as the menu. “It’s so rare to have an evening out where the magnificence of the food is matched by the intrigue and sheer joy of meeting people from so many cultures, many of whom have become friends,” he adds.

“Heart and soul of the culinary space”

Supper clubs operate in a gray area: they’re not restaurants, so they don’t need food licenses, which makes them easy to set up, and which also means they aren’t regulated by traditional hygiene and safety bodies.

In a bid to standardize the sector — and get a slice of the proverbial supper club pie — entrepreneur Kevin Vaz co-founded Splidu, an app that connects diners to unique underground dining experiences in the United Arab Emirates. The app facilitates the booking process, payment and legal paperwork, allowing chefs to focus on creativity rather than logistics.

“We have public liability insurances linked to our trade license, which also gives protection to the guest, provides protection to the chef, as well as any other stakeholder,” Vaz says.

Dragan Susa
Susa cooks Balkan-inspired dishes for his supper club guests.

While platforms like “Design My Night” operate in the UK, Australia and Ireland, and global app Eventbrite sometimes lists supper clubs among other restaurant deals and experiences, Vaz says that Splidu is among the first to focus exclusively on underground dining. He hopes to create a distinct category in the food and beverage industry for the sector, similar to how delivery services have evolved.

According to data from Splidu, more than 4,000 diners have booked experiences on the platform in the first half of 2024, with an average of 41 experiences offered each month.

“This is the heart and soul of the culinary space,” he says, adding that 88% of first-time users book another experience. “They get hooked on it: you can’t get that experience anywhere else.”

Susa, who uses Splidu to promote his events, says supper clubs have been a great way for him to test out his ideas and explore his culinary ambitions — and like most chefs, having his own restaurant would be a dream.

“You never know who’s going to be there, or who that person will know,” says Susa.