Biography Source google.com.pk
History and Characteristics.
Ful Medames, one of Egypt's national dishes, served with sliced eggs and vegetables.
Location of Egypt
The history of Egyptian cuisine begins with Ancient Egypt. Archaeological excavations have revealed that workers on the Great Pyramids of Giza were paid in bread, and onions,[citation needed] apparently their customary diet as peasants in the Egyptian countryside. Dental analysis and the desiccated loaves occasionally found in excavated tombs confirm this, in addition to indicating that ancient Egyptian bread was made with flour from emmer wheat.
Bread
Bread made from a simple recipe forms the backbone of Egyptian cuisine. It is consumed at almost all Egyptian meals; a working-class or rural Egyptian meal might consist of little more than bread and beans.
The local bread is a form of hearty, thick, glutenous pita bread called Eish Masri or Eish Baladi Modern Standard Arabic: rather than the Arabic ḫubz. The word comes from the Semitic root with the meaning "to live, be alive." The word ʿayš itself has the meaning of "life, way of living...; livelihood, subsistence" in Modern Standard and Classical Arabic; folklore holds that this synonymity indicates the centrality of bread to Egyptian life. In modern Egypt, the government subsidizes bread, dating back to a Nasser-era policy. In 2008, a major food crisis caused ever-longer bread lines at government-subsidized bakeries where there would normally be none; occasional fights broke out over bread, leading to fear of rioting. Egyptian dissidents and outside observers of the former National Democratic Party regime frequently criticized the bread subsidy as an attempt to buy off the Egyptian urban working classes in order to encourage acceptance of the authoritarian system; nevertheless, the subsidy continued after the 2011 revolution.
A street breakfast in Egypt
On a culinary level, bread is commonly used as gamosa, a utensil, at the same time providing carbohydrates and protein to the Egyptian diet. Egyptians use bread to scoop up food, sauces, and dips and to wrap kebabs, falafel, and the like in the manner of sandwiches. Most pita breads are baked at high temperatures (450 °F or 232 °C), causing the flattened rounds of dough to puff up dramatically. When removed from the oven, the layers of baked dough remain separated inside the deflated pita, which allows the bread to be opened into pockets, creating a space for use in various dishes.
Aish Merahrah is an Egyptian flat bread made with 5-10% ground fenugreek seeds added to maize flour. It is part of the traditional diet of the Egyptian countryside, prepared locally in village homes. The loaves are flat and wide, and usually about 50 cm in diameter. The maize flour is made into a soft dough that is fermented overnight with the help of a sourdough starter, then shaped into round loaves and allowed to rise or "proof" for 30 minutes before being flattened into round disks, which are then baked. This bread can be kept for days in an airtight container. The addition of fenugreek seeds increases the protein content, storage length and digestibility of the bread; on the other hand, it causes the eater to exude a distinctive odor in his or her sweat, which is occasionally mocked by more urban Egyptians.
Main courses
Egyptian cuisine is characterized by dishes such as Ful Medames, mashed fava beans; Koshari, a mixture of lentils, rice, pasta, and other ingredients; 'Molokheyya, chopped and cooked bush okra with garlic and coriander sauce; and Fetir Meshaltet. Egyptian cuisine shares similarities with food of the Eastern Mediterranean region, such as rice-stuffed vegetables, grape leaves, Shawerma, Kebab, Falafel, Baba Ghannoug, and baklava.
Some consider Koshari - a mixture of rice, lentils, and macaroni - to be the national dish. Ful Medames is also one of the most popular dishes. Fava bean is also used in making falafel (also known as ta`meyya), which originated in Egypt and spread around to other parts of the Middle East.
Kushari served at an Egyptian restaurant in Cairo.
Fried falafel
A slice of Egyptian Macaronie Béchamel
Ancient Egyptians are known to have used a lot of garlic and onions in their everyday dishes. Fresh garlic mashed with other herbs is used in spicy tomato salad and also stuffed in boiled or baked aubergines (eggplant). Garlic fried with coriander is added to Molokheyya, a popular green soup made from finely chopped jute leaves, sometimes with chicken or rabbit. Fried onions can be also added to Koshari.
Dish Definition
Baba Ghannoug A condiment made with eggplants, lemon juice, salt, pepper, parsley, cumin and oil.
Dakka A dry mixture of chopped nuts, seeds, Middle Eastern spices, and flavors.
Kebab Usually chopped and minced lamb meat on skewers grilled over charcoal.
Kofta
Kebda Fried liver, with seasonings. The Alexandrine specialty is known as Kebda Eskandarani (Alexandrian liver) which is rather spicier than the usual one.
Keshk A milk or yogurt savory pudding, made with flour, sometimes seasoned with fried onions, chicken broth or boiled chicken.
Maḥshi A stuffing of rice, seasoned with herbs and spices, put into vegetables like green peppers, aubergines, courgettes, tomatoes, or cabbage leaves. The stuffed vegetable is then placed in a pot and topped with tomato sauce and lemon or lime.
Maḥshi ḥamām Pigeon stuffed with rice or wheat and herbs, then roasted or grilled.
Dolma (Maḥshi waraa enab)Grape leaves stuffed with a rice mixture that can be made either with sauteed ground beef or vegetarian style. The rice is seasoned with crushed red tomatoes, onion, parsley, dill, salt, pepper and Egyptian spices. This mixture is then stuffed and rolled into an individual grape leaf, placed in a pot and topped with tomato sauce and lemon or lime.
Moussaka Sliced eggplants that are lightly grilled and placed in a flat pan with sliced onions, green peppers, and chili peppers. The dish is then covered with a red sauce made of tomato paste and Egyptian spices and then baked in the oven for 30–40 minutes at 350 degrees F.
Molokheyyah Green soup prepared in various styles, wherein the mallow leaves are very finely chopped, with ingredients such as garlic and coriander added for a characteristic aromatic taste, then cooked with chicken broth. Other kinds of broths can be used such as rabbit, shrimp, which is popular in Alexandria, and fish in Port Said. It is often considered the country's national dish.
Rozz Meʿammar A rice dish made by adding milk (and frequently butter or cream) and chicken stock or broth to cooked rice and subsequently baking it in an oven. It is frequently substituted for plain white rice at festive occasions and large family meals.
Shawarma A popular sandwich of shredded beef, lamb or chicken meat, usually rolled in pita bread with Tahina sauce. This is a relatively recent import from Levantine cuisine, possibly brought by Lebanese or Palestinian immigrants, it has since become a firm part of the Egyptian culinary landscape.
Tahini Sesame paste dip or spread made of sesame tahini, lemon juice, and garlic. Typically served with pita bread.
Tahini salad A condiment made with sesame butter, vinegar, lemon juice, salt, pepper, parsley, cumin and olive oil.
Bram rice Rice made with milk in a special kind of casserole called a bram, baked, and usually served with chicken liver
Macaroni béchamel An Egyptian variant of the Greek pastitsio, typically incorporating Gebna Rūmī (Egyptian Sardo or Pecorino cheese) along with a mixture of penne macaroni and béchamel sauce, and usually two layers of cooked spiced meat with onions
Shakshouka Eggs with tomato sauce and vegetables. An import from Moroccan cuisine that has become Egyptianized.
Samak mashwi Grilled fish. Like most fish dishes, a specialty of Alexandria.
Samak makli Fried fish. Another specialty of Alexandria.
Torly A tray of baked squash, potatoes, carrots, onions, and tomato sauce.
Other food items are:
Beeftek (veal schnitzel; a French cuisine import)
Kersha (Egyptian Arabic: [ˈkeɾʃæ]; Sheep gelatin with vegetables).
Bird Tongue (Orzo) Noodle Soup.
Besara
Duck
Duqqa
Eggs with basterma.
Ferakh panée Feseekh salted or fermented mullet, generally eaten on the spring festival of Sham El Nessim, which falls on Eastern Easter Monday).
Fitīr: Pies made of thin dough with liberal quantities of samnah. The fillings may be either savory (e.g., cheese, suguq) or sweet (e.g., qishta, jam). Certain types of restaurants specialize in fitir, although since at least the early 2000s they also generally make pizza.
Goose
Hummus
Koshari
Lentil soup
Chicken liver
Beef liver
Molokheyya(Egyptian style), with rabbits, chicken or other type of meat.
Pigeon stuffed with rice.
Shish taouk a relatively recent import from the Levant.
Sayyadeyah
White (feta) cheese and tomato salad with olive oil and garlic.
Tagine A typical food found all over North Africa. In Egypt, this generally refers to a dish consisting of meat or vegetables baked in an oven in a cylindrical glazed stoneware crock with a sauce (usually tomato-based). Lamb, beef, chickpeas, artichokes, okra, and broad beans were all popular Egyptian tagin items.
Octopus (grilled).
Qolqas: Taro root, generally peeled and prepared either with Swiss chard or tomato. Unpeeled qolqas and eggplant make the ṭabkha sawda, or "black dish," served to and despised by conscripts in the Egyptian Armed Forces
Mussels (fried and served with tartar sauce or stuffed with rice filling).
Shrimp (salad, grilled or cooked with vegetables in a güveç casserole).
Fattah
Bamyah,"beram bamyah"
Kawarea and Membar Dakka Mifataah Desserts
Basbousa topped with walnut
Egyptian desserts resemble other Eastern Mediterranean desserts. Basbousa sometimes called Harissa (in Morocco and Alexandria), is a spicy dish made from semolina and soaked in a sugar syrup. It is usually topped with almonds and traditionally cut vertically into pieces so that each piece has a diamond shape. Baklava (Egyptian Arabic: is a sweet dish made from many layers of phyllo pastry, an assortment of nuts, and soaked in a sweet syrup. Eish el-Saraya Fatayer are pancakes (filo dough) stuffed with everything from eggs to apricots or fruit of choice. Polvorón (Egyptian Arabic: is a common dish in all of North Africa. It is a sweet dish similar to kahk but much thinner. It is like shortbread and usually topped with roasted almonds.
Umm Ali prepared in the oven
Kahk is a traditional sweet dish served most commonly during Eid ul-Fitr in Egypt. It is a shortbread biscuit covered with icing sugar, which may be stuffed with dates, walnuts, or agameya (like Turkish-delight) or just served plain. Kunāfah is a dish of batter "fingers" fried on a hot grill and stuffed with nuts (usually pistachios), meats, heavy whipped cream or sweets. Luqmat al-Qadi literally translates to "The Judge's Bite". They are small, round donuts which are crunchy on the outside and soft and syrupy on the inside. They may be served with dusted cinnamon and powdered sugar. Qatayef is a dessert reserved for the Muslim holiday of Ramadan, a sort of sweet crêpe filled with cheese or nuts. Roz be laban “rice pudding”) is made with short grain white rice, full-cream milk, sugar, and vanilla. It may be served dusted with cinnamon. Umm Ali a national dish of Egypt, is a raisin cake soaked in milk and served hot.
Other desserts include:
Konafa, an Egyptian dessert made of thin pastry strands, nuts, and syrup.
Feteer meshaltet "cushion-like pie")
Couscous Egyptian style, with butter or thickened cream and sugar, plus nuts and dried fruit.
Halawa
Honey and coconut pie.
Ladida
Malban, Turkish Delight)
Mehalabeyya : A sweet blancmange.
Melabbes Cakes
Traditional apple cakes are seasoned with various spices such as nutmeg or cinnamon to provide additional flavour. Crushed nuts can also be added to the batter, the most popular being walnuts and almonds. Sponge cake is a cake based on flour (usually wheat flour), sugar, and eggs, sometimes leavened with baking powder, that derives its structure from an egg foam into which the other ingredients are folded Vanilla slice , from French: Mille-feuille) is a pastry made of several layers of puff pastry alternating with a sweet filling, typically pastry cream, but sometimes whipped cream, or jam. It is usually glazed with icing or fondant in alternating white and brown (chocolate) strips, and combed.
Cuisine and religious practice
Although Ramadan is a month of fasting for Muslims in Egypt, it is usually a time when Egyptians pay a lot of attention to food variety and richness, since breaking the fast is a family affair, often with entire extended families meeting at the table just after sunset. There are several special desserts served almost exclusive during Ramadan, such as Kunāfah and Qatayef In this month, many Egyptians prepare a special table for the poor or passers-by, usually in a tent in the street, called Ma'edet Rahman (Arabic: Egyptian Arabic: which translates literally as Table of (God) the Gracious (Merciful). These may be fairly simple or quite lavish, depending on the wealth and ostentation of the provider. (The Ma'edah of the dancer and actress Fifi Abdou is famous for its unusual richness to the point where jokes about it are common).
Observant Copts (Egypt's Oriental Orthodox Christian population) adhere to fasting periods according to the Coptic calendar; these may practically extend to more than two-thirds of the year for the most extreme and observant. The more secular Coptic population mainly fasts only for Easter and Christmas. The Coptic diet for fasting is essentially vegan. During this fasting, Copts usually eat vegetables and legumes fried in oil and avoid meat, chicken, and dairy products, including butter and cream.
Beverages
Tea is the national drink in Egypt, followed only distantly by Egyptian or Turkish coffee. Egyptian tea is uniformly black and sweet and is generally served in a glass, sometimes with milk. Tea packed and sold in Egypt is almost exclusively imported from Kenya and Sri Lanka. The Egyptian government considers tea a strategic crop[citation needed] and runs large tea plantations in Kenya. Egyptian tea comes in two varieties, Koshary and Saiidi.
Koshary tea popular in Lower (Northern) Egypt, is prepared using the traditional method of steeping black tea in boiled water and letting it sit for a few minutes. It is almost always sweetened with cane sugar and often flavored with fresh mint leaves. Adding milk is also common. Koshary tea is usually light in color and flavor, with less than a half teaspoonful of tea per cup considered to be near the high end.
Saiidi tea is common in Upper (Southern) Egypt. It is prepared by boiling black tea with water for as long as five minutes over a strong flame. Saiidi tea is extremely strong and dark ("heavy" in Egyptian parlance), with two teaspoonfuls of tea per cup being the norm. It is sweetened with copious amounts of cane sugar (a necessity since the formula and method yield a very bitter tea). Saiidi tea is often black even in liquid form.
Tea is a vital part of daily life and folk etiquette in Egypt. It typically accompanies breakfast in most households, and drinking tea after lunch is a common practice. Visiting another person's household, regardless of socioeconomic level or the purpose of the visit, entails a compulsory cup of tea; similar hospitality might be required for a business visit to the private office of someone wealthy enough to maintain one, depending on the nature of the business. A common nickname for tea in Egypt is "duty" (pronounced in Arabic as "wa-jeb" or "wa-geb"), as serving tea to a visitor is considered a duty, while anything beyond is a nicety.
Green tea is a recent arrival to Egypt (only in the late 1990s did green tea become affordable) and is not particularly popular. This contrasts with certain parts of the Maghreb and Sahara, where gunpowder tea has traditionally been used to make Touareg tea and the tea for the Moroccan tea ceremony.
Besides true tea, herbal teas are also often served at Egyptian teahouses. Karkadeh ; Egyptian Arabic:, a tea of dried hibiscus sepals, is particularly popular, as it is in other parts of North Africa. It is generally served extremely sweet and cold but may also be served hot. This drink is said to have been a preferred drink of the pharaohs. In Egypt and Sudan, wedding celebrations are traditionally toasted with a glass of hibiscus tea. On a typical street in downtown Cairo, one can find many vendors and open-air cafés selling the drink. In Egypt, karkadeh is used as a means to lower blood pressure when consumed in high amounts. Infusions of mint, cinnamon, dried ginger, and anise are also common, as is sahlab. Most of these herbal teas are considered to have medicinal properties as well; particularly common is an infusion of hot lemonade in which mint leaves have been steeped and sweetened with honey and used to combat mild sore throat.
Coffee is considered a part of the traditional welcome in Egypt. It is usually prepared in a small coffee pot, which is called dalla in Egypt. It is served in a small cup made for coffee called , Egyptian Arabic:
In Egypt, sugar cane juice is called aseer asab and is an incredibly popular drink served by almost all fruit juice vendors, who can be found abundantly in most cities.
Licorice teas and carob juice drinks are traditionally drunk during the Islamic month of Ramadan, as is qamar ad-din, a thick drink made by reconstituting sheets of dried apricot with water. The sheets themselves are often consumed as candy.
A sour, chilled drink made from tamarind is popular during the summer called Tamr Hindi. It literally means "Indian Dates", which is a local term for tamarind
Egyptian Food Recipes
Egyptian Food Recipes
Egyptian Food Recipes
Egyptian Food Recipes
Egyptian Food Recipes
Egyptian Food Recipes
Egyptian Food Recipes
Egyptian Food Recipes
Egyptian Food Recipes
Egyptian Food Recipes
Egyptian Food Recipes
Egyptian Food Recipes
Egyptian Food Recipes
Egyptian Food Recipes
Egyptian Food Recipes
Egyptian Food Recipes
Egyptian Food Recipes
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