To install click the Add extension button. That's it.

The source code for the WIKI 2 extension is being checked by specialists of the Mozilla Foundation, Google, and Apple. You could also do it yourself at any point in time.

4,5
Kelly Slayton
Congratulations on this excellent venture… what a great idea!
Alexander Grigorievskiy
I use WIKI 2 every day and almost forgot how the original Wikipedia looks like.
Live Statistics
English Articles
Improved in 24 Hours
Added in 24 Hours
What we do. Every page goes through several hundred of perfecting techniques; in live mode. Quite the same Wikipedia. Just better.
.
Leo
Newton
Brights
Milds

Kuwaiti cuisine

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Machboos

Kuwaiti cuisine is a fusion of Arabian, Iranian, Indian and  Mediterranean cuisines.[1][2] Kuwaiti cuisine is part of the Eastern Arabian cuisine. A prominent dish in Kuwaiti cuisine is machboos, a rice-based dish usually prepared with basmati rice seasoned with spices, and chicken or mutton.

Seafood is a significant part of the Kuwaiti diet, especially fish.[3] Mutabbaq samak is a national dish in Kuwait. Other local favourites are hamour (grouper), which is typically served grilled, fried, or with biryani rice because of its texture and taste; safi (rabbitfish); maid (mulletfish); and sobaity (sea bream).

Kuwait's traditional flatbread is called Iranian khubz. It is a large flatbread baked in a special oven and it is often topped with sesame seeds. Numerous local bakeries dot the country; the bakers are mainly Iranians (hence the name of the bread, "Iranian khubuz"). Bread is often served with mahyawa fish sauce.

There are many other cuisines available due to the international workforce in Kuwait.

YouTube Encyclopedic

  • 1/3
    Views:
    25 337
    1 320
    55 227
  • Second Spin, Country 91: Kuwait [International Food]
  • Kuwaiti Machboos Chicken| Machboos Deejaj
  • The Iconic Chicken Machboos - مجبوس الدجاج

Transcription

Dishes

Biryani with chicken
  • Biryani (Arabic: برياني) – a very common dish, which consists of heavily seasoned rice cooked with chicken or lamb. Originally from the Indian sub-continent.[4]
  • Gabout (Arabic: قبوط), – stuffed flour dumplings in a thick meat stew.
  • Harees (Arabic: هريس) – wheat cooked with meat then mashed, usually topped with cinnamon sugar.
  • Jireesh (Yireesh) (Arabic: جريش) – a mash of cooked spelt with chicken or lamb, tomatoes, and some spices.
  • Machboos (Arabic: مجبوس) – a dish made with mutton, chicken, or fish accompanied over fragrant rice that has been cooked in chicken/mutton well-spiced broth.[4]
  • Mashkhool (Arabic: مشخول) – white rice and at the bottom of the pot, there are rings of onion with turmeric and black pepper. and sometimes potatoes and eggplants are also added at the bottom of the pot.
  • mashwi jeder (Arabic: مشوي جدر) – white rice with beef or chicken, onions, potatoes and spices all at the bottom of the pot and then flipped upside down on a plate.
  • Maidem (Arabic: ميدم) – a white rice and on top of it ground fish mixed with spices.
  • Marabyan (Arabic: مربين) – a rice cooked with either fresh or dry shrimp.
  • Maglooba (Arabic: مقلوبة) – rice cooked with meat and potatoes and eggplant.
  • Margoog (Arabic: مرقوق) – vegetable stew, usually containing squash and eggplant, cooked with thin pieces of rolled out dough.
  • Mumawwash (Arabic: مموش) – rice cooked with green lentils and can be topped with dry shrimp.
  • Muaddas (Arabic: معدس) – rice cooked with red lentils and can be topped with dry shrimp.
  • Mutabbaq samak (Arabic: مطبق سمك) – fish served over rice. Rice is cooked in well-spiced fish stock.
  • Quzi (Arabic: قوزي) – roasted lamb stuffed with rice, meat, eggs, and other ingredients.

Sauces and soups

  • Daqqus (Arabic: دقوس) – Type of tomato sauce served alongside rice
  • Mabboj (Arabic: معبوج) – It is hot sauce, red or green pepper mixed with other ingredients.
  • Mahyawa (Arabic: مهياوة) – a tangy fish sauce.
  • Marrag (Arabic: مرق) – It is a type of broth with tomato paste and a variety of vegetables and spices.
  • Lentil soup

Desserts

  • Asida (Arabic: عصيدة) – a dish made up of cooked wheat flour, with added butter or honey.
  • Balaleet (Arabic: بلاليط) – sweet saffron noodles served with a savoury omelette on top.
  • Bayth elgitta (Arabic: بيض القطا) – a fried cookie filled with a mixture of ground nuts and tossed in powdered sugar. It was named after the egg of the crowned sandgrouse (common to the area) due to its similar shape.
  • Darabeel (Arabic: درابيل) – made from flour, eggs, milk and sugar formed into very thin rolled layers. Sometimes sugar, cardamom or cinnamon are added.
  • Lugaimat (Arabic: لقيمات) – fried yeast dumplings topped with sugar syrup (sugar, saffron).
  • Gers ogaily (Arabic: قرص عقيلي) – a traditional cake made with eggs, flour, sugar, cardamom, and saffron. Traditionally served with tea.
  • Zalabia (Arabic: زلابية) – fried dough soaked in syrup (sugar, lemon, and saffron, it has a distinctive swirly shape.
  • Ghraiba – Delicate cookies made of flour, butter, powdered sugar and cardamom. Usually served with Arabic coffee.
  • Khabeesa – sweet dish made of flour and oil.
  • Sab Alqafsha (Kuwaiti Arabic: صب القفشة) – similar to lugaimat but with additional saffron and cardamom syrup.
  • Elba (Arabic: ألبة) – Kuwaiti milk pudding with saffron and cardamom.
  • maghuta (Kuwaiti Arabic: ماغوطة)- It's a type of pudding that contains coconut shell powder Sago instead of starch made with saffron.[5][6]

Beverages

See also

References

  1. ^ Riolo, Amy (2008). Arabian Delights: Recipes & Princely Entertaining Ideas from the Arabian Peninsula. Capital Books. p. 23. ISBN 9781933102559.
  2. ^ Nevins, Debbie; O'Shea, Maria (2018). Kuwait. Cavendish Square Publishing, LLC. p. 128. ISBN 9781502636409.
  3. ^ "Consumption of fish and shellfish and the regional markets". Food and Agriculture Organization. Retrieved 8 October 2014.
  4. ^ a b Riolo, 2007, p.23 - 24
  5. ^ "أشهرها «التشريب» و«الماغوطة» و«الهريس»، الكويتيون حافظوا على عادات الاجداد الغذائية الخاصة بشهر رمضان". Albayan. 15 November 2002.
  6. ^ "عادات كويتية متأصلة في شهر رمضان المبارك". Kuna.
  7. ^ DiPiazza (2006) p.57

Bibliography

Further reading

This page was last edited on 26 March 2024, at 16:21
Basis of this page is in Wikipedia. Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 Unported License. Non-text media are available under their specified licenses. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. WIKI 2 is an independent company and has no affiliation with Wikimedia Foundation.