Israel
            SEASONINGS
Israel is a melting point of flavors: Mediterranean with olives, citrus, parsley, cilantro, rosemary, sage; Middle Eastern with cumin, coriander, Za’atar, Baharat, tahini, rose water, sumac; Sephardic and Mizrahi with above-mentioned cumin and coriander; as well as paprika, cinnamon, and chili peppers; Ashkenazi flavors from East and North, that are on the mild side in terms of spicing, but rely on onions, garlic, dill, and caraway. Israel doesn’t have native or unique peppers exclusive to its region; cooks use a variety of Bell, Jalapeno, Serrano, Poblano, Banana, and Anaheim peppers.
SAUCES
HARISSA, North Africa- hot dried chili paste with garlic, caraway, coriander, cumin, and extra virgin olive oil.
SCHUG, Yemen – fresh hot green peppers, garlic, cilantro, parsley, cumin, cardamom.
FILFEL CHUMA or PILPELCHUMA, Libya – garlic chili paste, made from dried and steamed red peppers, garlic, olive oil, lemon juice and spices, salt.
AMBA, Iraq – is a tangy mango pickle condiment from pickled green mangoes, vinegar, salt, turmeric, chilies, and fenugreek. It has become very popular in Israel since its introduction to the country by Iraqi Jews in the 1950s and 1960s. Now it is one of the most common condiments in sandwiches, as a topping for hummus and other mezze.
MATBUCHA, Morocco – a sauce made from tomatoes, peppers, garlic, olive oil, and paprika, now wildly popular in Israel.
                             
        
                    Morocco
            SEASONINGS
Moroccan cuisine combines sweetness with savor and adds spiciness without overwhelming heat. Cumin, coriander, saffron, ginger, and cinnamon are the main spices that give a distinctive profile compared to more subtle Mediterranean cuisines. Dried and fresh chili peppers are used lavishly; mint, fresh cilantro, and parsley freshen up dishes; bell peppers, tomatoes, onions, and garlic prevail in aromatics; olives and preserved lemons bring a tangy kick. Orange flower, jasmine, and rose petals water infuses exotic aromas into desserts.
RAS EL HANOUT – a dried spice mix popular in Morocco, Tunisia, and Algeria, blends from a dozen to 80 spices. The name means “head of the shop” – the best spices the seller has to offer. Each shop, company, or family may have their own blend. Common ingredients, though, include cardamom, cumin, clove, cinnamon, nutmeg, mace, allspice, dry ginger, chili peppers, coriander, black pepper, sweet paprika, fenugreek, and turmeric.
LA KAMA – a lesser-known but traditional Moroccan spice blend that includes black pepper, turmeric, ginger, cinnamon, and nutmeg.
Also popular in Moroccan cooking are:
Levantine ZA’ATAR – dried oregano, thyme or marjoram, sumac, sesame seeds, salt.
Arabic BAHARAT – black pepper, cumin, coriander, cinnamon, cloves, cardamom, nutmeg, paprika.
SAUCES
HARRISA, a hot chili pepper paste made from a variety of chiles, could be the baklouti, guajillo, anaheim, chiles de arbol peppers, along with garlic, coriander, caraway, cumin, and lemon juice (or preserved lemon) and olive oil and is widely used as a marinade, dip or sauce.
CHERMOULA is a marinade and relish used in Moroccan, Algerian, Libyan, and Tunisian cooking, it slightly reassembles the Latin American chimichurri. In Morocco its often used for fish. Frequent ingredients include fresh cilantro, garlic, olive oil, lemon juice or preserved lemon, cumin, paprika, chili peppers, salt. It can come in different hues and tones: green (without paprika and red elements, with red tone due to sweet paprika or harrisa and yellow tone due to turmeric (source).
Moroccan cuisine is exclusive with four distinct cooking styles that are both cooking techniques and flavor combinations on the same time: m’hammer (red), m’chermel (marinated), m’qali (fried) and q’dra (skills).
M’HAMMER is a classic way of preparing tagine in which roasted meat is doused in a sauce made of onions, paprika, and cumin. A generous amount of paprika is used, giving sauce a brownish red color, and the meat is cooked in the sauce, its later taken out, charred under the broiler (source) and put back.
M’CHERMEL is a cooking style that is characterized by marinating food in chermoula sauce.
After marinating, food can be cooked in any other style, but the term m’chermel describes the process and style of cooking with this particular marinade.
European tradition cooks usually pan-brown the meat in the beginning before stewing. M’QALLI method is vice versa – first, the meat is stewed, and when it absorbs the broth and becomes tender, is fried. Compulsory spices are ginger, saffron, and turmeric.
Q’DRA is also the name of deep cookware unique for this type of cooking. It involves cooking meat very slowly, until it becomes exceptionally tender. This will be considered the most casual cooking technique; literally what Moroccans will prepare almost every day. (source) A liquid yellow broth is made with saffron and turmeric, pepper, cinnamon, parsley, and smen, while paprika and ginger are never used for this style.