Iranian cuisine: Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|Culinary traditions of Iran}} |
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{{Refimprove|date=December 2008}} |
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{{Culture of Iran}} |
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{{Peacock|date=April 2009}} |
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{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2021}} |
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{{Persian arts}} |
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{{Use Oxford spelling|date=November 2021}} |
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'''Persian cuisine''' or the '''cuisine of [[Iran]]''' is diverse, with each province featuring dishes, culinary traditions and styles distinct to their regions. |
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[[File:Kebab Bakhtyari.jpg|thumb|260px|[[Chelow kabab]] is considered to be the [[national dish]] of Iran.<ref name="Walker 1992 p. 272">{{cite book | last=Walker | first=H. | title=Oxford Symposium on Food and Cookery 1991: Public Eating: Proceedings | publisher=Prospect Books | series=Proceedings of the Oxford Symposium on Food and Cookery | year=1992 | isbn=978-0-907325-47-5 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FrWgDRkS90EC&pg=PA272 | access-date=23 February 2023 | page=272}}</ref>]] |
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It includes a wide variety of foods ranging from [[chelo kabab]] (''barg'', ''[[koobideh]]'', ''joojeh'', ''shishleek'', ''soltani'', ''chenjeh''), ''[[khoresht]]'' (stew that is served with white [[Basmati]] or Iranian rice: ''[[ghormeh sabzi]]'', ''gheimeh'', and others), ''aash'' (a thick soup:as an example [[Ash-e anar]]), ''kookoo'' (vegetable [[Souffle]]), ''[[pilaf|pollo]]'' (white rice alone or with addition of meat and/or vegetables and herbs, including ''[[Legume|loobia]] pollo'', ''[[Sour cherry|albaloo]] pollo'', ''[[Sabzi polo|Sabzi pollo]]'', ''[[Berberis|zereshk]] pollo'', ''[[Vicia faba|Baghali]] Polo'' and others), and a diverse variety of salads, pastries, and drinks specific to different parts of Iran. The list of Persian [[recipe]]s, [[Hors d'oeuvre|appetizers]] and [[dessert]]s is extensive. |
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'''Iranian cuisine''' is the culinary traditions of [[Iran]]. Due to the historically common usage of the term "[[Name of Iran|Persia]]" to refer to Iran in the [[Western world]],<ref>{{cite encyclopedia|title=Tehrān|encyclopedia=Encyclopædia Britannica|access-date=April 16, 2018|quote=Persian cuisine is characterized by the use of lime and saffron, the blend of meats with fruits and nuts, a unique way of cooking rice, and Iranian hospitality. Food is subtly spiced, delicate in flavour and appearance, and not typically hot or spicy. Many recipes date back to ancient times; Iran's historical contacts have assisted in the exchange of ingredients, flavours, textures, and styles with various cultures ranging from the Mediterranean Sea region to China, some of whom retain these influences today.|chapter-url=https://www.britannica.com/place/Tehran/Cultural-life|chapter=Cultural Life}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|last=Clark|first=Melissa|date=April 19, 2016|title=Persian Cuisine, Fragrant and Rich With Symbolism|work=[[The New York Times]]|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2016/04/20/dining/persian-food-recipes-nowruz.html}}</ref><ref name="yarshater1">Yarshater, Ehsan [http://www.iran-heritage.org/interestgroups/language-article5.htm Persia or Iran, Persian or Farsi] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101024033230/http://www.iran-heritage.org/interestgroups/language-article5.htm|date=2010-10-24}}, ''Iranian Studies'', vol. XXII no. 1 (1989)</ref> it is alternatively known as '''Persian cuisine''', despite [[Persians]] being only one of a multitude of [[Ethnicities in Iran|Iranian ethnic groups]] who have contributed to Iran's culinary traditions.{{efn|This issue is still debated today.<ref name=Majd2008a>[[Hooman Majd|Majd, Hooman]], ''The Ayatollah Begs to Differ: The Paradox of Modern Iran'', by Hooman Majd, [[Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group]], September 23, 2008, {{ISBN|0-385-52842-6}}, 9780385528429. p. [https://books.google.com/books?id=1kuSfuHovwMC&pg=PA161 161]</ref>}} |
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Iran has a variety of 2,500 types of traditional food, one of the richest in the world.<ref>[https://en.irna.ir/news/83366161/ Iran; international context for promoting Culinary Tourism]</ref> The cuisine of Iran has made extensive contact throughout [[History of Iran|its history]] with the cuisines of its neighbouring regions, including [[List of dishes from the Caucasus|Caucasian cuisine]], [[Central Asian cuisine]], [[Greek cuisine]], [[Levantine cuisine]], [[Iraqi cuisine|Mesopotamian cuisine]], [[Russian cuisine]] and [[Turkish cuisine]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.cultureofiran.com/persian_cuisine.html |title=Persian Cuisine, a Brief History |publisher=Culture of IRAN |access-date=2016-01-08}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/spazi-cookery|title=ĀŠPAZĪ – Encyclopaedia Iranica|last=electricpulp.com|website=www.iranicaonline.org}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ifood.tv/network/iranian|title=Iranian Food|access-date=13 April 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140414083157/http://www.ifood.tv/network/iranian|archive-date=14 April 2014}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.cultureofiran.com/persian_cuisine.html|title=Culture of IRAN|website=Cultureofiran.com|access-date=13 April 2014}}</ref> Aspects of Iranian cuisine have also been significantly adopted by [[Indian cuisine]] and [[Pakistani cuisine]] through various historical [[Persianate society|Persianate]] sultanates that flourished during [[Islamic rulers in the Indian subcontinent|Muslim rule on the Indian subcontinent]], with the most notable and impactful of these polities being the [[Mughal Empire]].<ref>{{cite book |first=K. T. |last=Achaya |year=1994 |title=Indian Food: A Historical Companion |publisher=Oxford University Press |page=11}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last1=Stanton |display-authors=etal|title=Cultural Sociology of the Middle East, Asia, and Africa: An Encyclopedia|date=2012|publisher=SAGE Publications|isbn=978-1-4522-6662-6|page=103}}</ref><ref name="Holland2014">{{cite book|author=Mina Holland|title=The Edible Atlas: Around the World in Thirty-Nine Cuisines|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=wXH5AQAAQBAJ&pg=PT207|date=6 March 2014|publisher=Canongate Books|isbn=978-0-85786-856-5|pages=207–}}</ref> |
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Herbs are frequently used along with fruits such as [[plums]], [[pomegranates]], [[quince]], [[prune (fruit)|prunes]], [[apricots]], and [[raisins]]. The main [[Persia]]n cuisines are combination of [[rice]] with [[meat]], [[lamb and mutton|lamb]], [[chicken]], or [[fish]] and some [[onion]], [[vegetables]], [[nut (fruit)|nuts]], and [[herbs]]. To achieve a balanced taste, characteristic Persian flavorings such as [[saffron]], dried [[Lime (fruit)|lime]]s, [[cinnamon]], and [[parsley]] are mixed delicately and used in some special dishes. |
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Typical Iranian main dishes are combinations of [[rice]] with [[meat]], [[vegetable]]s and [[Nut (fruit)|nuts]]. [[List of culinary herbs and spices|Herbs]] are frequently used, along with fruits such as [[plum]]s, [[pomegranate]]s, [[quince]], [[prune]]s, [[apricot]]s and [[raisin]]s. Characteristic Iranian spices and flavourings such as [[saffron]], [[cardamom]], and [[dried lime]] and other sources of sour flavoring, [[cinnamon]], [[turmeric]] and [[parsley]] are mixed and used in various dishes. |
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==National cuisine== |
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===Rice=== |
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[[Image:tahchine.jpg|thumb|Tah-chin, a savory saffron rice-cake with a filling that is most usually marinated chicken fillets.]] |
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[[Image:Kababi alborz2.jpg|thumb|The ubiquitous Persian Kabab is often served with both plain rice and Tah-chin.]] |
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It is believed that rice (''berenj'' in [[Persian language|Persian]]) was brought to Iran from the [[Indian subcontinent]] in ancient times. Varieties of rice in Iran include ''champa'', ''rasmi'', ''anbarbu'', ''mowlai'', ''sadri'', ''khanjari'', ''shekari'', ''doodi'', and others. [[Basmati]] rice from [[India]] is very similar to these Persian varieties and is also readily available in Iran. Traditionally, rice was most prevalent as a major staple item in northern Iran, while in the rest of the country bread was the dominant staple. The varieties of rice most valued in Persian cuisine are prized for their aroma, and grow in the north of Iran. |
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Outside of Iran, a strong presence of Iranian cuisine can be found in cities with significant [[Iranian diaspora]] populations, namely the [[San Francisco Bay Area]], [[Washington Metropolitan Area]], [[Vancouver]], [[Toronto]],<ref name="london">{{cite news |title=Top five Persian restaurants in London |url=https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/iran-blog/2016/feb/03/top-five-persian-restaurants-london |newspaper=The Guardian |date=February 3, 2016 |access-date=February 16, 2016 |issn=0261-3077 |language=en-GB |first=Saeed Kamali |last=Dehghan}}</ref><ref name="LA">{{cite news |url=https://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/09/27/the-best-persian-food-los-angeles_n_982054.html |work=HuffPost |title=The Best Persian Food In LA (PHOTOS) |date=November 27, 2011 |first=Lien |last=Ta}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.sfchronicle.com/food/article/Bay-Area-chef-circles-back-to-childhood-with-11203085.php |title=Bay Area chef circles back to childhood with Iranian breads |work=San Francisco Chronicle |access-date=March 3, 2018}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |title=The 10 best new restaurants in Toronto in 2013 |url=https://www.theglobeandmail.com/life/holiday-guide/holiday-survival-guide/what-was-the-best-new-restaurant-in-toronto-this-year/article15889206 |website=The Globe and Mail |date=13 December 2013 |access-date=February 16, 2016|last1=Nuttall-Smith |first1=Chris }}</ref> [[Houston]] and especially [[Tehrangeles|Los Angeles and its environs]].<ref name="london"/><ref name="LA"/><ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.reuters.com/article/us-iran-rallies-los-angeles/los-angeles-large-iranian-community-cheers-anti-regime-protests-idUSKBN1ET0BN |title=Los Angeles' large Iranian community cheers anti-regime protests |date=January 4, 2018 |work=Reuters |first=Dan |last=Whitcomb}}</ref> |
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====Methods of cooking rice==== |
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There are three primary methods of cooking rice in Iran: |
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*''Polo'': rice is prepared by soaking in salted water and boiled, while parboiled rice is called Chelo. Chelo is drained and put back in the pot to be steamed. This method results in an exceptionally fluffy rice with the rice grains separated and not sticky. A golden rice crust is created at the bottom of the pot called [[Tahdig|Tah-deeg]] (literally "bottom of the pot"). Tah-deeg can be plain or with spreading lavash or other thin breads or slices of raw potatoes on the bottom of the pot. Meat, vegetable, nuts and fruits are sometimes added in layers or completely mixed with the chelo and then steamed, such as [[Vicia faba|Baghali]] Polo, Lubia Polo, Zereshk Polo and Sabzi Polo. When Chelo is in the pot the heat is reduced and a piece of thick cloth or towel is place on top of the pot for absorbing the extra steam. |
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*''[[Kateh]]'' : rice that is cooked until the water is absorbed completely. This is also the traditional dish of Gilan Province (described in detail below). |
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*''[[Steaming|Damy]]'' : cooked almost the same as ''Kateh'' but at the start ingredients that can be cooked thoroughly with the rice are added such as grains and beans such as [[lentil]] in "Adass Polo". In making [[Kateh]] the heat is reduced to minimum when the rice and other ingredients are almost cooked. If kept long enough on the stove without burning and over-cooking Damy and Kateh can also produce Tah-deeg. ''Damy'' literally means "[[steaming]]". A special form of Damy is ''Tah-chin'', that is a mixture of yogurt, lamb and rice plus [[saffron]] and egg yolks . |
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==History== |
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Among the writings available from the [[Middle Persian]] scripts, the treatise of [[Khosrow and Ridag]], points about stews and foods and the way of using them and how they are obtained in the [[Sassanid]] period are found as valid references in compiling the history of cooking in Iran. The names of many of the Iranian dishes and culinary terms that have been translated can be seen in Arabic language books. Naturally the customs and habits of the Arabs influenced the Iranians {{Citation needed|date=February 2024}}, specifically in [[Abbasid Caliphate|Abbasid period]]. |
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[[File:Eftar sholezard sangak.jpg|thumb|[[Sholezard]] (with calligraphy of "[[Ramazan]]"), Sangak bread and some other breads for [[Eftar]].]] |
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Bread is called نان [nān] in Persian, which has been borrowed as [[Naan]] in English. There are four major Iranian flat breads: |
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*''[[Barbari Bread|Nan-e barbari]]'': thick and oval-shaped, also known as Tabrizi Bread or Nan-e Tabrizi, for its origins in and links to the city of [[Tabriz]]. |
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*''[[Lavash|Nan-e lavash]]'': thin, flaky and round or oval, and is also the oldest known bread in the Middle East and Central Asia. |
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*''[[Sangak|Nan-e sangak]]'': Triangle-shaped bread that is stone-baked. |
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*''[[Taftan (bread)|Nan-e taftoon]]'': Thin, but thicker than Lavash, soft and round. |
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[[History of Iran|Ancient Persian]] philosophers and physicians have influenced the preparation of Iranian foods to follow the rules of the strengthening and weakening characteristics of foods based on the [[Iranian traditional medicine]].<ref>{{cite news |last1=Seeney |first1=Belinda |title=Balancing the hot and cold |agency=The Redcliffe & Bayside Herald |date=16 Feb 2011 |location=Redcliffe, Queensland}}</ref> |
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Other breads include: |
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*''Nan-e shirmal'': Made like ''barbari'', except with milk instead of water, in addition to a bit of sugar, and is eaten during breakfast or with tea. |
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*''Nan-e Gandhi'': Sweet bread made like taftoon, and is eaten during breakfast or with tea. |
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*''Nan-e gisu'': a sweet [[Armenia]]n bread, and also is eaten in the morning or with tea later in the day. |
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*''Nan-e dushabi'': bread made with grape syrup. |
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*''Nan-e tiri'': like ''lavash''. |
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*''Nan-e tokhme-ru'': breads with sweet-smelling seeds on them. |
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*''Nan-e khoshke-shirin'': sweet brittle bread baked in gentle heat. |
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*''Nan-e khoshke-tanur'': brittle bread baked in gentle heat. |
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*''Nan-e kopoli'': any kind of thick bread. |
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==Historical Iranian cookbooks== |
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Second only to rice is the production and use of wheat. There are said to be more than forty types of wheat breads from very dark to very light. From crisp to limp, and at least one type of flat bread will be a part of every meal. ''Nan-e lavash'' is an example of the thin crisp bread with good keeping qualities, while ''nan-e sangak'' is a fresh yeast bread, baked on hot stones and eaten while still warm. |
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Although the Arabic cookbooks written under the rule of the [[Abbasid Caliphate]]—one of the Arab caliphates which ruled Iran after the [[Muslim conquest of Persia|Muslim invasion]]—include some recipes with [[Iranian languages|Iranian]] names, the earliest surviving classical cookbooks in [[Persian language|Persian]] are two volumes from the [[Safavid dynasty|Safavid]] period. The older one is entitled "Manual on cooking and its craft" (''Kār-nāmeh dar bāb e tabbāxī va sanat e ān'') written in 927/1521 for an aristocratic patron at the end of the reign of [[Ismail I]]. The book originally contained 26 chapters, listed by the author in his introduction, but chapters 23 through 26 are missing from the surviving manuscript. The recipes include measurements for ingredients—often detailed directions for the preparation of dishes, including the types of utensils and pots to be used—and instructions for decorating and serving them. In general, the ingredients and their combinations in various recipes do not differ significantly from those in use today. The large quantities specified, as well as the generous use of such luxury ingredients as [[saffron]], suggest that these dishes were prepared for large aristocratic households, even though in his introduction, the author claimed to have written it "for the benefit of the nobility, as well as the public." |
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The second surviving Safavid cookbook, entitled "The substance of life, a treatise on the art of cooking" (''Māddat al-ḥayāt, resāla dar ʿelm e ṭabbāxī''), was written about 76 years later by a chef for [[Abbas I of Persia|Abbas I]]. The introduction of that book includes elaborate praise of God, the prophets, the [[imam]]s, and the [[shah]], as well as a definition of a master chef. It is followed by six chapters on the preparation of various dishes: four on rice dishes, one on qalya, and one on āsh. The measurements and directions are not as detailed as in the earlier book. The information provided is about dishes prepared at the royal court, including references to a few that had been created or improved by the shahs themselves. Other contemporary cooks and their specialties are also mentioned.<ref name="Encyclopædia Iranica COOKBOOKS">{{cite encyclopedia |last=Ghanoonparvar |first=Mohammad R. | title= Cookbooks | encyclopedia=Encyclopedia Iranica | access-date=2009-04-05|url=http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/cookbooks-classical-in-persian}}</ref> |
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===Fruits and vegetables=== |
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[[File:Asheanar.jpg|thumb|A bowl of ''[[pomegranate soup|Ash-e anār]]'', a soup made with [[pomegranates]].]] |
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Iran's agriculture, producing many fruits and vegetables, especially what a lot of countries consider “exotic” are easier to come by. A bowl full of fruit is common on most Persian tables and dishes of vegetables and herbs are standard sides to most meals. |
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==Staple foods== |
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Iran is one of the top [[date palm|date]] producers in the world; some of the special date [[cultivar]]s (like Rotab) are grown in Iran. |
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===Rice=== |
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For generations, Iranians have been eating various fruits, vegetables, and herbs for their health benefits that have only recently been discovered in other parts of the world. For example, [[onions]] and [[garlic]], [[pomegranate]], and sabzijat (various green herbs) are regular ingredients in many Persian dishes. |
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The usage of [[rice]], at first a specialty of the [[Safavid dynasty|Safavid Empire]]'s court cuisine, evolved by the end of the 16th century CE into a major branch of Iranian cookery.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Fragner|first1=B.|title=ĀŠPAZĪ|date=1987|publisher=Encyclopaedia Iranica}}</ref> Traditionally, rice was most prevalent as a major [[Staple food|staple item]] in northern Iran and the homes of the wealthy, while bread was the dominant staple in the rest of the country. |
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Varieties of rice in Iran include [[Gerdeh (rice)|gerde]], [[Domsiah|domsia]] (literally meaning black-tail, because it is black at one end), [[Champa rice|champa]], doodi (smoked rice), Lenjan (from [[Lenjan County]]), Tarom (from [[Tarom County]]), and anbarbu. |
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While the climate of the Middle East is conducive to the growing of fruits, the orchards and vineyards of Iran produce fruits of legendary flavour and size. These are not only enjoyed fresh and ripe as desserts but are also imaginatively combined with meats and form unusual accompaniments to main dishes. When fresh fruits are not available, a large variety of excellent dried fruits such as dates, figs, apricots and peaches are used instead. The list of fruits includes fresh dates and fresh figs. Many citrus fruits, apricots, peaches, sweet and sour cherries, apples, plums, pears, pomegranates and many varieties of grapes and melons. |
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The following table includes three primary methods of cooking rice in Iran. |
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While the [[eggplant]] (aubergine) is ''"the potato of Iran"'', Iranians are fond of fresh green salads dressed with olive oil, lemon juice, salt and pepper and a little garlic. Vegetables such as [[pumpkin]], [[spinach]], [[green bean]]s, [[broad beans]], [[courgettes]], varieties of [[squashes]] and [[carrots]] are commonly used in rice and meat dishes. |
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{| class="wikitable" |
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[[Tomatoes]], [[cucumbers]] and [[spring onions]] often accompany a meal. A small sweet variety of cucumber is popularly served as a fruit. |
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|- |
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!Method |
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!Description |
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|- |
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|[[Pilaf|''Polow'']] and ''chelow'' |
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|Chelow is plain rice served as an accompaniment to a stew or kebab, while polow is rice mixed with something. They are, however, cooked in the same way. Rice is prepared by soaking in salted water and then boiling it. The parboiled rice (called ''chelow'') is drained and returned to the pot to be steamed. This method results in exceptionally fluffy rice with the rice grains separated and not sticky. A golden crust called ''[[tahdig]]'' or tadig is created at the bottom of the pot using a thin layer of bread or potato slices. Often, tahdig is served plain with only a rice crust. Meat, vegetables, nuts, and fruit are sometimes added in layers or mixed with the chelow and then steamed. When chelow is in the pot, the heat is reduced, and a thick cloth or towel is placed under the pot lid to absorb excess steam. |
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|- |
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|''[[Kateh]]'' |
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|Rice that is cooked until the water is absorbed completely. It is the traditional dish of [[Gilan Province]]. |
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|- |
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|''[[Steaming|Dami]]'' |
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|Rice that is cooked almost the same as kateh, but at the start, ingredients that can be cooked thoroughly with the rice (such as grains and beans) are added. While making kateh, the heat is reduced to a minimum until the rice and other ingredients are almost cooked. If kept long enough on the stove without burning and over-cooking, dami and kateh can also produce tahdig. A special form of dami is [[tahchin|tachin]], which is a mixture of yogurt, chicken (or lamb), and rice, plus [[saffron]] and egg yolks. |
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|} |
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<gallery mode="packed"> |
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The term ''"[[dolmeh]]"'' is used to describe any vegetable or fruit stuffed with a rice or rice-and meat mixture: vine leaves, [[cabbage]] leaves, spinach, eggplant, [[sweet peppers]], tomatoes, even [[apples]] and [[quince]].The most popular dolmas in Iran today are stuffed grape leaves, which are prepared by lightly parboiling the fresh leaves in salted water, then stuffing them with a mixture of ground meat, rice, chopped herbs like parsley, split peas, and seasoning. The dolmas are then simmered in a sweet-and-sour mixture of vinegar or lemon juice, sugar, and water. Stuffings vary, however, from region to region and even from family to family. Stuffed cabbage and grape leaves are the only dolmas that can be served hot or cold. When intended to be served cold they generally do not contain meat, however. Fruit dolmas are probably a specialty of Persian cuisine. The fruit is first cooked, then stuffed with meat, seasonings, and sometimes tomato sauce; the dolmas are then simmered in meat broth or a sweet-and-sour sauce. In recent decades new variations have been introduced, largely under Western influence: Potatoes, artichokes, green peppers, onions, tomatoes, and other vegetables are also stuffed<ref name="Encyclopædia Iranica DOLMA">{{cite encyclopedia |last=GHANOONPARVAR |first=M. R. | title= DOLMA | encyclopedia=Encyclopedia Iranica | accessdate=2009-04-05|url=http://www.iranica.com/newsite/index.isc?Article=http://www.iranica.com/newsite/articles/unicode/v7f5/v7f527.html}}</ref>. |
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Making rice by Iranian attitude.jpg|Iranian-style rice-cooking |
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Թրջած բրինձ.JPG|Soaking rice in a pot |
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Making Chelow 3.jpg|Using potatoes as [[tahdig]] in chelow-style rice-cooking |
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Potato Tahdig.JPG|Potato [[tahdig]] |
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Lavash bread Tahdig.png|[[Tahdig]] of [[lavash]] bread |
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</gallery> |
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===Bread=== |
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To underline both the skill and imagination of Iranian cookery, a few examples of the main ingredients in Iranian specialties would include duck, pomegranates and walnuts; lamb, prunes and cinnamon; spinach, orange and garlic; and chicken and sliced peaches sautéed in onions and butter, seasoned with cinnamon and lemon juice. |
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Second only to rice is the production and use of [[wheat]]. The following table lists several forms of [[flatbread]] and pastry bread commonly used in Iranian cuisine. |
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{| class="wikitable" |
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|- |
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|style="width: 20%;"|[[File:Pan armenio en el mercado de Yerevan.JPG|center|165px]][[Lavash]]: Thin, flaky, and round or oval. It is the most common bread in Iran and the Caucasus. |
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|style="width: 20%;"|[[File:Naan Sangak.jpg|center|140px]][[Sangak]]: Plain, rectangular, or triangle-shaped leavened flatbread that is stone-baked. |
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|style="width: 20%;"|[[File:Taftun bread.jpg|center|170px]][[Taftan (bread)|Taftun]]: Thin, soft and round-shaped leavened flatbread that is thicker than lavash. |
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|[[File:Qandi bread in Iran.jpg|center|185px]] Qandi bread: A sweet bread, sometimes [[brioche]]-like and sometimes flat and dry.<ref>{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=RL6LAwAAQBAJ |title=The Oxford Companion to Food |author=Davidson, Alan |author2=Jaine, Tom |year=2014 |page=414 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0-19-967733-7 }}</ref> |
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|[[File:Barbari bread.jpg|center|155px]][[Barbari bread|Barbari]]: Thick and oval flatbread; also known as ''Tabrizi'', referring to the city of [[Tabriz]]. |
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|- |
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|[[File:Baguette-246424.jpg|center|180px]][[Baguette]]: A long, narrow [[France|French]] loaf, typically filled with [[sausage]]s and vegetables. |
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|[[File:Paskalya coregi.jpg|center|165px]][[Sheermal]] ("milk-rubbed"): A sweet pastry bread, also widely known as ''nan-e gisou'' |
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|[[File:Komaj.JPG|center|180px]]Komaj: A sweet date bread with turmeric and cumin, similar to nan e gisu.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://talesofakitchen.com/breakfast/persia-date-bread-with-turmeric-and-cumin-komaj/ |title=Persian date bread with turmeric and cumin (Komaj) |author=Tales of a Kitchen |date=March 5, 2013 |access-date=5 December 2016 |archive-date=6 February 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180206012833/http://talesofakitchen.com/breakfast/persia-date-bread-with-turmeric-and-cumin-komaj/ |url-status=dead }}</ref> |
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|} |
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===Fruits and vegetables=== |
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The above are only a few examples of the combination of meats and vegetables, or meats and fruits plus unusual seasonings that may go into ''"chelo khoresh"'', the favorite Iranian dish that is served at least once daily. This dish of crusty baked rice is topped by one of the sauces listed, or one of dozens more limited only by price and availability of ingredients. |
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The [[Agriculture in Iran|agriculture of Iran]] produces many fruits and vegetables. Thus, a bowl of fresh fruit is common on Iranian tables, and vegetables are standard side dishes in most meals. These are not only enjoyed fresh and ripe as desserts but are also combined with meat as accompaniments to main dishes.<ref>{{cite encyclopedia |last=Ramazani |first=Nesta |encyclopedia=Encyclopedia Iranica |title=Uses of the Fruit in Cooking |url=http://www.iranica.com/articles/beh-quince-cydonia#pt3 |access-date=2008-10-11 |archive-date=19 January 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110119220041/http://iranica.com/articles/beh-quince-cydonia#pt3 |url-status=dead }}</ref> When fresh fruits are not available, a large variety of dried fruits such as [[Date palm|dates]], [[Common fig|figs]], [[apricot]]s, [[plum]]s and [[peach]]es are served instead. Southern Iran is one of the world's major date producers, where some special [[cultivar]]s such as the [[Mazafati|Bam date]] are grown. |
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Vegetables such as [[pumpkin]]s, [[spinach]], [[green bean]]s, [[Vicia faba|fava bean]]s, [[Zucchini|courgette]], varieties of [[Cucurbita|squash]], [[onion]], [[garlic]] and [[carrot]] are commonly used in Iranian dishes. [[Tomato]]es, [[cucumber]]s and [[scallion]] often accompany a meal. While the [[eggplant]] is "the potato of Iran",<ref>{{cite web|url=http://faostat3.fao.org/browse/Q/QC/E|title=Production/Crops for Eggplant in 2013|publisher=Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, Statistics Division (FAOSTAT)|date=2015|access-date=20 November 2015|archive-date=22 November 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161122053717/http://faostat3.fao.org/browse/Q/QC/E}}</ref> Iranians are fond of fresh green salads dressed with [[olive oil]], [[lemon|lemon juice]], [[Edible salt|salt]], [[chili powder|chili]], and [[Garlic powder|garlic]]. |
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''[[Khoresht]] Beh'' ([[Quince]] Stew) is an example of using fruits in Iranian cooking: chunks of lamb are stewed with slices or cubes of tart quince and yellow [[split pea]]s; this dish is always served with rice<ref>{{cite encyclopedia |last= Ramazani|first=Nesta |encyclopedia=Encyclopedia Iranica |title= Uses of the Fruit in Cooking |url=http://www.iranica.com/newsite/articles/v4f1/v4f1a050.html |accessdate=2008-10-11 }}</ref>. |
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Fruit [[dolma]] is probably a specialty of Iranian cuisine. The fruit is first cooked, then stuffed with meat, seasonings, and sometimes tomato sauce. The dolma is then simmered in meat broth or ascallions sweet-and-sour sauce.<ref name="Encyclopædia Iranica DOLMA">{{cite encyclopedia |last=Ghanoonparvar |first=M. R. |author-link=M.R. Ghanoonparvar | title= Dolma | encyclopedia=Encyclopedia Iranica | access-date=2009-04-05|url=http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/dolma}}</ref> |
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===Drinks and dessert=== |
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[[File:Bastani.jpg|thumb|Traditional Iranian ice cream often contains flakes of frozen [[clotted cream]] and is most commonly naturally flavoured with [[saffron]] and [[rose water]]. It is usually served sandwiched between two thin crispy [[waffles]].]] |
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The traditional drink accompanying Iranian dishes is called [[doogh]]. Doogh is a combination of yogurt, water (or soda) and dried mint. Other drinks are several types of especially prepared [[sherbet]]s called ''[[Sherbet (Middle Eastern Drink)|Sharbat]]'' and [[Khak shir]]. One favorite is [[Carrot juice|Aab-e Havij]], alternately called ''havij bastani'', [[carrot juice]] made into an [[Ice cream soda|ice cream float]] and garnished with [[cinnamon]], [[nutmeg]] or other [[spices]]. There are also drinks that aren't served with meals. These are ''Sheer Moz'' (banana milk shake), ''Aab Talebi'' ([[cantaloupe]] juice), and ''Aab Hendevaneh'' ([[watermelon]] juice). These drinks are commonly made in stands or [[kiosk]]s in streets on summer days and on hiking trails. ''Aab Anaar'' ([[pomegranate]] juice) is also popular and has recently (2007) become popular in North America, specifically for its supposed health benefits including its high anti-oxidant levels (much higher than [[green tea]]). Although firm scientific evidence demonstrates that the touted health benefits of pomegranate are yet unproven and largely a marketing tactic by one U.S. company in particular. ''Sekanjebin'' is a thick syrup made from carbonated or plain water, [[vinegar]], [[mint]] and sugar. It can be mixed with a drop of [[rosewater]] to drink or to be used as a dip for [[Romaine lettuce]]. |
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[[Verjuice]], a highly acidic juice made by pressing unripe grapes or other sour fruit, is used in various Iranian dishes.<ref>{{cite encyclopedia |last=Ramazani |first=N. |title=ĀB-ḠŪRA |encyclopedia=Encyclopedia Iranica |url=http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/ab-gura |access-date=2011-06-26}}</ref> It is mainly used within soup and stew dishes, but also to simmer a type of squash dolma. Unripe grapes are also used whole in some dishes such as ''khoresh-e ghooreh'' (lamb stew with sour grapes). As a spice, verjuice powder (''pudr-e ghooreh'') is sometimes reinforced by verjuice and then dried. |
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There are many dessert dishes, ranging from ''Bastani-e Za'farāni'' (Persian Ice Cream with saffron, also called Bastani-e Akbar-Mashti, later on called Gol-o Bolbol as well) to the [[faludeh]], a sort of frozen sorbet made with thin starch noodles and rose water. Persian Ice Cream is flavored with saffron, rosewater, and chunks of heavy cream. There are also many types of sweets. The sweets divide into two categories: "Shirini Tar" (lit. moist sweets) and "Shirini Khoshk" (lit. dry sweets). The first category consists of French-inspired pastries with heavy whole milk whipped cream, glazed fruit toppings, tarts, custard-filled éclairs, and a variety of cakes. Some have an Iranian twist, such as the addition of [[pistachio]], [[saffron]] and walnuts. The second category consists of more traditional sweets: ''Shirini-e Berenji'' (a type of rice cookie), ''Shirini-e Nokhodchi'' (clover shaped, chickpea cookies), ''Kolouche'' (a large cookie usually with a walnut or fig filling), ''Shirini-e Keshmeshi'' (raisin and saffron cookies), ''Shirini-e Yazdi'' (muffins or cupcakes, originated in the city of Yazd), ''Nan-e kulukhi'' (a kind of large and thick cookie similar to clod inside without any filling), and more. |
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==Typical spices== |
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Three others that is, ''[[Zulbia]]'', ''[[Bamieh]]'' and ''[[Gosh Feel|Gush-e Fil]]'' are very popular. Bamieh is an oval-shaped sweet dough piece, deep-fried and then covered with a syrup (traditionally with honey). Zulbia is the same sort of dough, also deep-fried, but it is poured into the oil so that it twirls, then covered with the same syrup (or honey)<ref>[http://nemoonehbakery.com/Pastries.html Some Iranian Pastries with images]</ref>. It has become popular in other parts of the world, and is known as [[funnel cake]] in North America, and [[Jalebi]] in India and Pakistan. Goosh-e Fil (lit. Elephant's ear) is also deep-fried dough, fried in the shape of a flat elephant's ear and then covered with sugar powder. Of course, no discussion of Persian desserts would be complete without one of the classics, ''[[Halva]]rdeh'' (Tehrani for ''halvā-arde'', with ''halvā'', an Arabic loan word meaning 'sweet' and ''arde'', Persian for Arabic ''tāhini''. Halvā comes in various qualities and varieties, from mainly sugar to [[sesame seed]] extract, which is known as ''tahini'' in the west (the aforementioned Persian ''arde''), with [[pistachio|pestach]], and Iran produces some of the best. |
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[[File:Spice flower (3588302490).jpg|thumb|upright|left|A spice bowl in a shop at the [[Vakil Bazaar]] of [[Shiraz]]]] |
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[[File:Bazar-e Bozorg, Esfahan, Iran (5071786511).jpg|thumb|upright|A spice shop at the [[bazaar of Isfahan]]]] |
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''[[Advieh]]'' or ''chāshni'' refers to a wide variety of pungent vegetables and dried fruits that are used in Iranian cuisine to flavor food. |
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One of the traditional and most widespread Iranian spices is [[saffron]], derived from the flower of ''[[Crocus sativus]]''. [[Rose water]], a flavored water made by steeping [[rose]] petals in water, is also a traditional and common ingredient in many Iranian dishes. |
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[[Noghl]], a dish of sugar-coated [[almond]]s, is often served at Iranian weddings. |
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[[Heracleum persicum|Persian hogweed]] (''golpar''), which grows wild in the humid mountainous regions of Iran, is used as a spice in various Iranian soups and stews. It is also mixed with vinegar into which broad beans are dipped before eating. |
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===Essential accompaniments=== |
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There are certain accompaniments (''mokhalafat'') which are essential to every Iranian meal at lunch (''nahar'') and dinner (''shaam''), regardless of the region. These include, first and foremost, a plate of fresh herbs, called ''sabzi'' ([[basil]], [[cilantro]], [[fenugreek]], [[tarragon]], Persian [[watercress]] or ''shaahi''), a variety of flat breads, called ''naan'' or ''noon'' (''sangak'', ''lavash'', ''[[Barbari Bread|barbari]]''), cheese (called ''panir'', a Persian variant of [[feta]]), sliced and peeled cucumbers, sliced tomatoes and onions, [[yoghurt]], and lemon juice. Persian gherkins (''khiyarshur'') and pickles (''[[Tursu|Torshi]]'') are also considered essential in most regions. |
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Some other common spices are [[cardamom]], made from the seeds of several ''[[Elettaria]]'' and ''[[Amomum]]'' plants; [[Dill|shevid]], an annual herb in the celery family [[Apiaceae]]; [[mahleb]], an aromatic spice made from the seeds of ''[[Prunus mahaleb]]''; and [[Dried lime|limu amani]], dried lime. |
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Tea (''chai'') is served at breakfast. At other times it is served based on the region, usually many times throughout the day. For example, in the province of ''Khorasan'' it is served immediately before and after lunch and dinner. The traditional methods of tea preparation and drinking differ between regions and peoples. |
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There are also several traditional combinations of spices, two of which are ''arde'' ([[Tahini]]), made from toasted ground hulled sesame seeds, and [[delal sauce]], made of heavily salted fresh herbs such as cilantro and parsley. |
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==Regional cuisine== |
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===Northern Iran=== |
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{{See also|Gilan Province}} |
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{{See also|Mazanderani cuisine}} |
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==Typical food and drinks== |
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''Kateh'' is the traditional dish of [[Gilan]], and is simply Persian rice cooked in water, butter and salt until the water is fully absorbed. This method results in rice that is clumped together and is the predominant style of cooking rice in the [[Caspian Sea|Caspian]] region. In Gilan and [[Mazandaran]], ''kateh'' is also eaten as a breakfast meal, either heated with milk and jam, or cold with Persian cheese (''panir'') and garlic. ''Kateh'' is commonly eaten in other parts of Iran because of its short cooking time and easy preparation, and is prescribed widely as a natural remedy for those who are sick with the [[common cold]] or [[flu]], and also for those suffering from stomach pains and [[stomach ulcer|ulcers]]. |
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Typical Iranian cuisine includes a wide variety of dishes, including several forms of [[kebab]], [[stew]], [[soup]], and [[pilaf]] dishes, as well as various [[salad]]s, [[dessert]]s, [[pastry|pastries]], and [[drink]]s. |
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The famous [[caviar|Iranian caviar]] and Caspian fish roes hails from that region, and is served with eggs, in frittatas (''kuku sabzi'') or omelettes. |
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===Main course=== |
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Gilan and Mazandaran is probably home to the most numerous list of recipes compared to other regions. Some Gilani and Mazandarani delicious dishes are: |
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{{col-begin}} |
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{{col-3}} |
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*Alu Mosema |
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*Anar Bij |
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*[[Ash (Persian food)|Ash-e]] [[Fatima Zahra]] (In respect and honor <br />of her) |
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*[[Ash (Persian food)|Ash-e]] [[Turnip|Shalqam]] |
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*[[Ash (Persian food)|Ash-e]] [[milk|Shir]] |
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*Ash-e Qalamkar |
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*Ash-e Torsh |
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*Badenjan [[Tursu|Torshi]] (pickled eggplants) |
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*[[Vicia faba|Baqala]] bij |
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*[[Vicia faba|Baqala]] Qatoq |
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*Choqortmeh |
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*Darar (a [[Meze]]) |
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*Felfel [[Tursu|Torshi]] (pickled piments) |
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*Fereni |
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*[[Fesenjan]] |
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*Haftabijar |
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*[[Halva]]ye Raqayeb |
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*[[Kabab torsh]] |
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*[[Kateh]] |
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*Khali Ash |
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{{col-3}} |
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*Khalou Abeh |
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*Kolucheh Fuman |
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*Kolucheh Lahijan |
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*kuku Eshpel |
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*Kuku gerdu |
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*Longi |
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*Mahi Dudi |
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*Mahi Fibij |
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*Mast o Khiar (a [[Meze]]) |
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*[[Mirza Qasemi]] |
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*[[Fruit preserves|Morabaye]] [[Citron|Badrang]] |
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*Morabaye Bahar Narenj(Orange flower jam) |
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*Morabaye [[Rosa damascena|Gol Mohammadi]] |
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*Morabaye [[Squash (plant)|Kadu]] |
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*Morabaye Shaqayeq |
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*Morabaye Velesh |
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*Morabaye [[Cornaceae|Zoqal Akhteh]] |
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*Morq-e Torsh |
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*Naz Khatun |
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{{col-3}} |
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*Piyaz [[Tursu|Torshi]] (pickled onions) |
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*[[Reshteh Khoshkar]] |
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*Rob e Narenj |
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*Rob e Anar |
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*Rob e Sir Torsh |
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*Shah Kuku |
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*Shami-e Rashti |
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*Sheshandaz |
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*Shirin Tareh |
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*Shur Mahi |
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*Sirabij |
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*Sir Qaliyeh |
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*Sir [[Tursu|Torshi]] (pickled garlic) |
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*Spinach thick soup (Ash-e Esfenadj) |
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*Torshi Kebab |
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*Torsh Shami |
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*Torsh Tareh |
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*Vavishka |
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*Yaralmasi [[Tursu|Torshi]] |
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*Zeytun Parvardeh (a [[Meze]]) |
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{{col-end}} |
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====Kebab==== |
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[[Image:Reshteh khoshkar.jpg|thumb|''"Reshteh Khoshkar"'' with its origin in [[Gīlān Province|Gilan]], is a famous syrup-soaked pastry of ground walnuts & cinnamon.]] |
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<!-- Do NOT change kabab with kebab or the opposite. kebab is a "general" word and kabab is the Iranian cuisines' name. Some like shish kebab is from the Turkish cuisine so must be kept original --> |
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In Iran, kebabs are served either with rice or [[Nan-e-kabab|with bread]]. A dish of chelow [[white rice]] with [[kebab]] is called ''[[chelow kabab]]'', which is considered the [[national dish]] of Iran. The rice can also be prepared using the [[kateh]] method, and hence the dish would be called ''kateh [[kebab]]''. |
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The following table lists several forms of kebab used in Iranian cuisine. |
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The Gilani variety of rice is considered one of the best in Iran, where it has been in use since the fourth century BCE. |
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{| class="wikitable" |
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|style="width: 20%;"|[[File:Kabab koobideh bbq persian food.jpg|center|150px]][[Kabab koobideh|Kabab Koobideh]]: Barbecued [[ground meat|ground lamb or beef]], mixed with [[parsley]] and [[onion]]. |
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|style="width: 20%;"|[[File:Jujeh Kabob.JPG|center|195px]][[Jujeh kabab|Jujeh Kabab]]: Grilled chunks of chicken; one of the most common dishes in Iran.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.irishtimes.com/life-and-style/food-and-drink/recipes/saffron-and-lemon-chicken-joojeh-kabab-1.1772597|title=Saffron and lemon chicken (Joojeh Kabab)|website=Irish Times|language=en-US|access-date=2016-07-02}}</ref> |
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|style="width: 20%;"|[[File:Iranian barg kebab.jpg|center|165px]][[Kabab barg|Kabab Barg]]: Barbecued and marinated lamb, chicken or beef. |
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|- |
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|[[File:Kebab torsh.jpg|center|180px]][[Kabab torsh|Kabab Torsh]]: Traditional kebab from [[Gilan Province|Gilan]] and [[Mazandaran Province|Mazenderan]], marinated in a paste of crushed walnuts, pomegranate juice, and olive oil. |
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|[[File:Kebab Bakhtyari.jpg|center|170px]]Kabab Bakhtyari: Mixture of barbecued fillet of lamb (or veal) and chicken breast.<ref>{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=gEca_4iSNCUC |title=Iran. Ediz. Inglese |author=Burke, Andrew |author2=Elliott, Mark |chapter=MAIN COURSES: Kabab |date=15 September 2010 |page=84|publisher=Lonely Planet |isbn=978-1-74220-349-2 }}</ref> |
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|[[File:Chenjeh.jpg|center|180px]]Chenje: Skewered and grilled cubes of meat. Iranian equivalent of [[shish kebab]].<ref>{{Cite book |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=se-_CAAAQBAJ&q=chenjeh+kebab&pg=PT93 |title=Snackistan |author=Sally Butcher |chapter=Kebab-e-Chenjeh |date=Oct 10, 2013 |publisher=Pavilion Books |isbn=978-1-909815-15-5 }}{{Dead link|date=February 2023 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref> |
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|[[File:Shashlik.jpg|center|150px]][[Shashlik]]: A popular form of [[shish kebab]]. In Iranian cuisine, shashlik is usually in form of large chunks. |
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|[[File:Kabab tabei.jpg|center|150px]]Kabab Tabei: Homemade grilled meat, prepared on the pan.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.aashpazi.com/kababtabei |title=KABAB TABEI |author=Aashpazi.com}}</ref> |
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|[[File:Kabab1.jpg|center|150px]][[Bonab kababi|Bonab Kabab]]: A type of kebab that is made of ground mutton, onion, and salt in the city of [[Bonab]]. |
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|} |
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====Stew==== |
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Eating fresh raw Mazandarani broad beans is common in Gilan and Mazanderan, either alone or with cooled [[Kateh]], salted fish eggs (''Ashpel'' ); but selling and enjoying (especially by people of the lower classes) of hot cooked broad beans (''bāqelā-garmak'') sprinkled with salt and powdered Persian marjoram ([[golpar]]) are not an uncommon street scene in cold weather almost everywhere in Iran. The Gilani dish ''Baqali Qatoq'' is cooked with [[dill]] garlic, and [[turmeric]], into which eggs are emptied at the end<ref name="Encyclopædia Iranica BĀQELĀ">{{cite encyclopedia |last=Aʿlam |first=H | title= BĀQELĀ | encyclopedia=Encyclopedia Iranica | accessdate=2009-04-07|url=http://www.iranica.com/newsite/index.isc?Article=http://www.iranica.com/newsite/articles/v3f7/v3f7a042.html}}</ref>. |
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[[Khoresh]] is an Iranian form of [[stew]], which is usually accompanied by a plate of white rice. A khoresh typically consists of herbs, fruits, and meat pieces, flavored with [[tomato paste]], [[saffron]], and [[pomegranate juice]]. Other non-khoresh types of stew such as [[Abgoosht|dizi]] are accompanied by bread instead of rice. |
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Several Iranian stew dishes are listed within the following table. |
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===Khuzestan=== |
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{| class="wikitable" |
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''See [[Khuzestan#People and Culture|Khuzestan: People and Culture]] |
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|- |
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|style="width: 20%;"|[[File:Eggplant stew persian.jpg|center|160px]][[Khoresh bademjan|Khoresh-e Bademjan]]: Eggplant stew with tomato, [[verjuice]] and saffron. |
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|style="width: 20%;"|[[File:Khoresht-e fesenjan.jpg|center|180px]][[Fesenjān|Khoresh-e Fesenjan]]: Stew flavored with pomegranate syrup and ground walnuts. |
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|style="width: 20%;"|[[File:Gheyme.jpg|center|165px]][[Gheimeh|Khoresh-e Qeyme]]: Stew with [[split pea]]s, [[French fries]], and [[dried lime]]. |
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|style="width: 20%;"|[[File:Ailin14VeganGhormehSabzi.JPG|center|170px]][[Ghormeh sabzi|Qormeh Sabzi]]: Stew with herbs such as [[parsley]], [[leek]], [[Coriander|cilantro]], and [[fenugreek]]. |
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|- |
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|[[File:Celery stew.jpg|center|180px]]Khoresh-e Karafs: Stewed [[celery]] and meat.<ref>{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=eut7BwAAQBAJ |title=Authentic Iran: Modern Presentation of Ancient Recipes |author=Vatandoust, Soraya. |chapter=Khoresh-e Karafs |date=13 March 2015 |page=132 |publisher=Xlibris Corporation |isbn=978-1-4990-4061-6 }}</ref> |
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|[[File:Սալորի շոգեխաշած սոուս.JPG|center|160px]]Khoresh-e Alu: Stewed prunes and meat.<ref>{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=GOidnQOUco0C |title=Persian Cooking: A Table of Exotic Delights |author=Ramazani, Nesta. |chapter=Khoresht-e aloo |year=1997 |page=138|publisher=Iranbooks |isbn=978-0-936347-77-6 }}</ref> |
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|[[File:Spinach & plums.jpg|center|100px]]Khoresh-e Alu Esfenaj: Stewed prunes, spinach, and meat.<ref>{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=oIkAAwAAQBAJ |title=New Persian Cooking: A Fresh Approach to the Classic Cuisine of Iran |author=Dana-Haeri, Jila |author2=Lowe, Jason |author3=Ghorashian, Shahrzad |chapter=Glossary |date=28 February 2011 |page=221|publisher=I.B.Tauris |isbn=978-0-85771-955-3 }}</ref><ref>{{Cite Q|Q114657881|mode=cs1 <!-- The New Mediterranean Jewish Table: Old World Recipes for the Modern Home --> |author-last=Goldstein |author-first=Joyce |author-link=Joyce Goldstein |others=Illustrated by Hugh D'Andrade. |edition=1st, ebook |isbn=978-0-520-96061-9 |lccn=2020757338 |page=319 |url={{GBurl|WYmTCwAAQBAJ|p=319}} |chapter=Persian Stew with Lamb or Beef, Spinach, and Prunes }}</ref> |
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|[[File:Khoresh havij.png|center|150px]]Khoresh-e Havij: Stewed carrots and meat.<ref>{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=GOidnQOUco0C |title=Persian Cooking: A Table of Exotic Delights |author=Ramazani, Nesta. |year=1997 |page=130 |publisher=Iranbooks |isbn=978-0-936347-77-6 }}</ref> |
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|- |
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|[[File:Claypot beef stew with potatoes and mushrooms.jpg|center|140px]]Khoresh-e Qarch: Mushroom stew.<ref>{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=oIkAAwAAQBAJ |title=New Persian Cooking: A Fresh Approach to the Classic Cuisine of Iran |author=Dana-Haeri, Jila |author2=Ghorashian, Shahrzad |author3=Lowe, Jason |chapter=Khoresht-e gharch |date=28 February 2011 |page=72 |publisher=I.B.Tauris |isbn=978-0-85771-955-3 }}</ref> |
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|[[File:Baqala qatoq.jpg|center|150px]][[Baghala ghatogh|Baqala Qatoq]]: [[Gilaks|Gilak]] stew with [[Vicia faba|fava beans]], dill, and eggs. |
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|[[File:Sarein Abgoosht.JPG|center|200x200px]][[Abgoosht|Dizi]] ([[Piti (food)|piti]]): [[Lamb and mutton|Mutton]] stew with chickpeas and potatoes. |
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|[[File:Iranian Kofte Rizeh.jpg|center|150px]]Kuft-e Rize: [[Azerbaijan (Iran)|Azerbaijani]] and [[Iranian Kurdistan|Kurdish]] meatball stew. |
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|- |
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|Khoresh-e Bamieh: [[Okra]] and [[meat]] stew. |
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|Khoresh-e Kadu: Stewed [[zucchini]] and meat. |
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|} |
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====Soup and āsh==== |
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There are various forms of soup in Iranian cuisine, including ''sup e jow'' ([[barley]] soup), ''sup e esfenaj'' ([[spinach]] soup), ''sup e qarch'' ([[Edible mushroom|mushroom]] soup), and several forms of thick soup. A thick soup is referred to as ''[[āsh]]'' in Iran, which is an Iranian traditional form of soup.<ref name="IranicaAS">{{cite encyclopedia |last= Elāhī |first= ʿE| title=ĀŠ (thick soup), the general term for a traditional Iranian dish comparable to the French potage.| encyclopedia=Encyclopedia Iranica | access-date=2016-02-08|url=http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/as-2}}</ref> Also, ''[[Hodge-Podge (soup)|shole qalamkar]]'' is the Iranian term for "hodge-podge" soup,<ref>{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=qmzLAwAAQBAJ&q=Ash+e+showle+qalamkar&pg=PA8 |title=100 of the Most Delicious Iranian Dishes |author=Trost, Alex |author2=Kravetsky, Vadim |date=13 June 2014 |page=8|isbn=978-1-4944-9809-2 }}</ref> a soup made of a mixture of various ingredients. |
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[[Image:Iranianbyryani2.jpg|thumb|[[Iran]]ian Biryani's ([[Isfahan]])]] |
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[[Image:Iranianbyryani1.jpg|thumb|Iranian Biryani [[Chef]]]] |
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[[Esfahan]] in Central Iran is home to some well known and culturally significant Persian foods including: |
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The following table lists a number of soup and āsh dishes in Iranian cuisine. |
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*'''[[Fesenjan]]''' - a casserole type dish with a sweet and tart sauce containing the two base ingredients, pomegranate puree and ground walnut cooked with either chicken, duck, lamb or beef and served with rice. |
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{| class="wikitable" |
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|style="width: 20%;"|[[File:Broth.jpg|center|180px]][[Chicken soup|Soup-e Morgh]]: Chicken and noodle soup.<ref>{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=GOidnQOUco0C |title=Persian Cooking: A Table of Exotic Delights |author=Ramazani, Nesta. |chapter=Chicken Soup (Soup-e Morgh) |year=1997 |page=38 |publisher=Iranbooks |isbn=978-0-936347-77-6 }}</ref> |
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|style="width: 20%;"|[[File:Sup e jow.jpg|center|170px]]Soup-e Jow: Barley soup.<ref>{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=eut7BwAAQBAJ |title=Authentic Iran: Modern Presentation of Ancient Recipes |author=Vatandoust, Soraya. |chapter=Soup-e Jow |date=13 March 2015 |page=22 |publisher=Xlibris Corporation |isbn=978-1-4990-4061-6 }}</ref> |
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|style="width: 20%;"|[[File:Iranian tripe soup.jpg|center|150px]][[Tripe soups|Sirabi]]: Tripe soup; also known as ''sirab shirdun''.<ref>{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=o6rDCwAAQBAJ |title=Gender and Dance in Modern Iran: Biopolitics on Stage |author=Meftahi, Ida. |date=14 July 2017 |page=72 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-317-62062-4 | quote=sirabi-va-shirdun}}</ref> |
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|[[File:Tarkhineh.JPG|center|180px]][[Tarhana|Tarkhine]]<nowiki/>h: Grain and yoghurt soup. |
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|[[File:St John Restaurant, Smithfield, London (3445306202).jpg|center|150px]][[Nettle soup|Gazaneh]]: Nettle soup. |
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|[[File:Adasi.png|center|140px]][[Lentil soup|Adasi]]: Lentil soup. |
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|[[File:Ash e reshte.jpg|center|160px]][[Ash reshteh|Āsh-e Reshte]]: Noodle thick soup. |
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|[[File:Asheanar.jpg|center|150px]][[Pomegranate soup|Āsh-e Anār]]: Pomegranate thick soup. |
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|[[File:Buttermilk soup ardabil.JPG|center|150px]][[Ash-e doogh|Āsh-e Doogh]]: Buttermilk thick soup. |
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|[[File:Keledoş 02.jpg|center|150px]][[Keledoş|Kalle Joosh]]: [[Kashk]] thick soup. |
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|[[File:Bozbash from Iranian (Azeri) cuisine.jpg|center|150px]][[Bozbash]]: meat soup with red or white beans, green vegetables, herbs, onions and leeks, dried limes and spices. |
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|[[File:Shole-mashhadi-1391.jpg|center|150px]]Sholeh: Thick soup with meat, different legumes, bulgur, rice, nutmeg and other spices. Shole is originally from [[Mashhad]]. |
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====Polow and dami==== |
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*'''[[Gaz (candy)|Gaz]]''' - the name given to Persian Nougat using the sap collected from angebin, a plant from the Tamarisk family found only on the outskirts of Esfahan. It is mixed with various ingredients including rose water, pistachio and almond kernels and saffron. |
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Apart from dishes of rice with kebab or stew, there are various rice-based Iranian dishes cooked in the traditional methods of polow and dami. |
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''Polow'' is the [[Persian language|Persian]] word for [[pilaf]] and it is also used in other [[Iranian languages]], in the English language it may have variations in spelling. A polow dish includes rice stuffed with cuts of vegetables, fruits, and beans, usually accompanied by either chicken or red meat. Dami dishes are similar to polow in that they involve various ingredients with rice, however they are cooked using the dami method of cooking the dish all in one pot. |
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* '''[[Sohan (cake)|Sohan]]-e-Asali (Honey Toffee)''' - A toffee made from honey and butter flavoured with cardamom and saffron and coated with slivered almond and pistachio kernels. Very yummy and very fattening! |
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The following are a number of traditional Iranian rice-based dishes: |
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*'''[["Khoresht-e-mast" (Yoghurt Stew)]]''' - is a traditional dish in Esfahan. Unlike other stews despite its name it is not served as a main dish and with rice; since it is more of a sweet pudding it is usually served as a side dish or dessert. The dish is made with yogurt, lamb/mutton or chicken, saffron, sugar and orange peels. Iranians either put the orange pells in water for one week or longer or boil them for few minutes so the orange peels become sweet and ready for use. People in Iran make a lot of delicate dishes and jam with hull of fruits. This dish often accompanies celebrations and weddings. |
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{| class="wikitable" |
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|style="width: 20%;"|[[File:Sabzi polo.jpg|center|150px]][[Sabzi polo|Sabzi Polo]]: Rice with chopped herbs, usually served with [[Fish as food|fish]]. |
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|style="width: 20%;"|[[File:Loobia Polo.jpg|center|150px]][[Loobia polo|Loobia Polo]]: Rice with green beans and minced meat. |
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|style="width: 20%;"|<!-- Deleted image removed: [[File:Persian-sour-cherry-saffron-rice-polow.jpg|center|180px]] -->[[Albaloo polo|Albalu Polo]]: Rice with [[Prunus cerasus|sour cherries]] and slices of chicken or red meat. |
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|style="width: 20%;"|{{anchor|Morasa polow|Morasa|Morassa|Morassa polo}}[[File:Morasa Poló (Close).JPG|center|150px]]Morasa Polo: Rice "jewelled" with barberries, pistachios, raisins, carrots, orange peel, and almonds.<ref>{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QzqXzbAbsB8C |title=The New Persian Kitchen |author=Shafia, Louisa. |chapter=Morasa polo|date=16 April 2013 |publisher=Clarkson Potter/Ten Speed |isbn=978-1-60774-357-6 }}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |website=Parisa's Kitchen |url=https://parisaskitchen.com/2014/10/09/jeweled-rice-morasa-polow/ |title=Jeweled Rice (Morasa Polo) |date=October 9, 2014}}</ref> |
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|{{anchor|Shirin polow|Shirin|Shirin polo}}[[File:Քաղցր փլավ.JPG|center|160px]][[Shirin polow|Shirin Polo]]: Rice with sweet carrots, raisins, and almonds.<ref>{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FkAXHQKE6MkC |title=Culture and Customs of Iran |author=Daniel, Elton L. |author2=Mahdī, ʻAlī Akbar |year=2006 |page=153 |publisher=Bloomsbury |isbn=978-0-313-32053-8 }}</ref> |
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|[[File:Adas polos.jpg|center|150px]]Adas Polo: [[Lentil rice|Rice with lentils]], raisins, and dates.<ref>{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=19C3DnJyWE0C |title=A Taste of Persia: An Introduction to Persian Cooking |author=Batmanglij, Najmieh. |page=96 |chapter=Adas polow|year=2007 |publisher=I. B. Tauris, Limited |isbn=978-1-84511-437-4 }}</ref> |
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|[[File:Baghala polo.jpg|center|170px]][[Baghali polo|Baqali Polo]]: Rice with [[Vicia faba|fava beans]] and [[Dill|dill weed]].<ref>{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=19C3DnJyWE0C |title=A Taste of Persia: An Introduction to Persian Cooking |author=Batmanglij, Najmieh. |page=104 |chapter=Baqala polow|year=2007 |publisher=I. B. Tauris, Limited |isbn=978-1-84511-437-4 }}</ref> |
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|[[File:Dampokhtak.JPG|center|160px]]Dampokhtak: Turmeric rice with [[Phaseolus lunatus|lima beans]].<ref>{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2dPgAAAAMAAJ |title=Food of Life: A Book of Ancient Persian and Modern Iranian Cooking and Ceremonies |author=Batmanglij, Najmieh. |year=1990 |page=103|publisher=Mage Publishers |isbn=978-0-934211-27-7 }}</ref> |
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|[[File:Tahchin.jpg|center|160px]][[Tahchin|Tachin]]: [[Rice cake]] including yogurt, egg, and chicken fillets. |
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|[[File:Kalam Polow.jpg|center|160px]]Kalam Polo: Rice with cabbage and different herbs. |
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|[[File:Zereshk polo.jpg|center|160px]]Zereshk Polo: Rice with [[berberis]] and saffron. |
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|} |
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====Other==== |
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*Esfahan is also famous for ''' Beryani-[[Biryani]]'''. This dish is made of mutton or lamb which is ground/minced and then cooked on one side in a special small pan over open fire. Beryani is generally eaten with a certain type of bread, "nan-e-tafttoon". |
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{| class="wikitable" |
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|style="width: 20%;"|[[File:Kuku Sabzi (Iranian food).jpg|center|150px]][[Kuku (food)|Kuku]]: Whipped eggs folded in with herbs or potato. |
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|style="width: 20%;"|[[File:Kotlet on the pan.jpg|center|150px]][[Cutlet|Kotlet]]: Mixture of fried [[ground beef]], [[mashed potato]], and [[onion]]. |
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|style="width: 20%;"|[[File:Russischer Oliviersalat.JPG|center|150px]][[Olivier salad]]: Mixture of potato, eggs, peas, and diced chicken (or sausage), dressed with [[mayonnaise]]. |
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|style="width: 20%;"|[[File:Seven types of caviar.jpg|center|150px]][[Caviar]]: Salt-cured fish eggs. |
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|[[File:Dolma, Tabriz.jpg|center|160x160px]][[Dolma|Dolmeh]]: [[Stuffed peppers]] or [[Vitis|vine leaves]]. |
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|[[File:Koofteh tabrizi.jpg|center|150px]][[Kofta|Kufte]]: [[Meatball]] or [[meatloaf]] dishes. |
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|[[File:Beefjf0159.JPG|center|150px]][[Beef tongue|Zaban]]: Beef tongue. |
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|[[File:Iranian pache dish.jpg|center|150px]][[Khash (dish)|Pache]]: Boiled parts of cow or sheep; also known as ''khash''. |
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|[[File:Iranian pirashki.jpg|center|150px]][[Pirozhki|Pirashki]] (pirozhki): Baked or fried buns stuffed with a variety of fillings. |
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|[[File:Persian Port Sausage (Sosis Bandari) with sliced tomato and kosher dills.jpg|center|150px]][[Port sausage|Sosis Bandari]]: Traditional sausage with onion, tomato paste, and chili pepper. |
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|[[File:Nargesi omelette.jpg|center|150px]][[Nargesi (food)|Nargesi]]: A type of spinach [[omelette]]. |
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|[[Sirabij]]: A type of garlic [[omelette]]. |
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|[[File:Gondiisrael.jpg|center|150px]][[Gondi (dumpling)|Gondi]]: [[Persian Jews|Iranian Jewish]] dish of [[meatball]]. |
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|[[File:Makhsoos (Special) Pizza.jpg|center|150px]][[Iranian pizza]]: A typical Iranian [[pizza]]. |
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|[[File:Dopiaza.JPG|center|150px]][[Dopiaza]]: Traditional [[Shiraz]] curry prepared with a large quantity of onions. |
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|[[File:Chuchvara4.jpg|center|150px]][[Joshpara]]: [[Azerbaijan (Iran)|Azerbaijani]] meat-filled dumplings. |
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|[[File:Iranian omelet.jpg|center|150px]][[Scrambled eggs|Tomato scrambled eggs]]: A dish made from eggs and tomato. |
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|[[File:Chaghour baghour (cropped).jpg|center|200px]]Jaqur-Baqur: A dish made from sheep's heart, liver and kidney. |
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|[[File:Isfahan biryan.jpg|center|150px]]Beryani: A traditional dish in [[Isfahan]] made from minced meat, fat, onion, cinnamon, saffron, walnut and mint that is served with baked lung. |
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|[[File:FoodOmelete.jpg|center|150px]][[Omelette]]: Originated in [[ancient Persia]] and was introduced worldwide in the 16th century. |
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|} |
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===Appetizers=== |
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{| class="wikitable" |
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[[Image:Koofteh tabrizi.jpg|thumb|Sample of Tabrizi traditional food. Shown here: ''Kufteh Tabrizi''.]] |
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*''[[Ghormeh sabzi]]'' (Herb Stew) and ''[[Gheimeh]]'' (Split-pea Stew) are traditional stews of Azerbaijan. |
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|style="width: 20%;"|[[File:Mixed Pickles (9370-72).jpg|center|160px]][[Tursu|Torshi]]: Mixed pickles salad. |
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*Aash (Thick Soup) is popular food in Azerbaijan.The word Aash had passed from Persian into the Central Asian Turkic languages<ref>{{cite encyclopedia |
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|style="width: 20%;"|[[File:Salad Shirazi.jpg|center|150px]][[Shirazi salad|Salad Shirazi]]: Chopped cucumbers, tomato, and onion with verjuice and a little lemon juice. |
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| last = Fragner |
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|style="width: 20%;"|[[File:Bouranee.png|center|140px]][[Borani]]: Yogurt with spinach and other ingredients. |
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| first = B. |
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|style="width: 20%;"|[[File:Շալոտով մածուն նանայով.JPG|center|130px]][[Tzatziki|Mast-o Khiar]]: [[Strained yogurt]] with cucumber, garlic, and [[mentha|mint]]. |
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| title = ĀŠPAZĪ |
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|- |
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| encyclopedia = Encyclopedia Iranica |
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|[[File:Կանաչի 2.JPG|center|150px]][[Sabzi khordan|Sabzi]] ([[leaf vegetable|greens]]): Fresh herbs and raw vegetables. |
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| url = http://www.iranica.com/newsite/index.isc?Article=http://www.iranica.com/newsite/articles/unicode/v2f8/v2f8a014.html |
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|[[File:Zeytoon-Parvardeh-Zeytoun-Zeitoun-Zeytun-Persian-Olive- Pomegranate- Walnutfood-photo-by-persian-dutch-network.jpg|center|150px]][[Zeytun parvarde|Zeytun Parvardeh]]: Olives in a paste made of pomegranate, walnut and garlic.<ref>{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=eut7BwAAQBAJ |title=Authentic Iran: Modern Presentation of Ancient Recipes |author=Vatandoust, Soraya. |page=44 |chapter=Zeytoon Parvardeh |date=13 March 2015 |isbn=978-1-4990-4061-6 }}</ref> |
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| accessdate = 2009-03-13 }}</ref>.Varieties of Aash (Thick Soup) in Azerbaijan include : |
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|[[File:Mirza-Qasemi dish.jpg|center|150px]][[Mirza Ghassemi|Mirza Qasemi]]: Grilled eggplant with egg, garlic and tomato. |
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::'''Kahskh Aash''' (Dried Whey Thick Soup) |
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|[[File:Kashk e Baademjaan.jpg|center|150x150px]][[Kashk e bademjan|Kashk-e Bademjan]]: Mixture of kashk, eggplant and mint. |
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::'''Turshulu Aash''' (Sour Thick Soup) |
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|} |
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::'''Yogurtlu Aash''' (Yogurt Thick Soup) |
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::'''Isfanaj Aashi''' (Spinach Thick Soup) |
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::'''Aash Mast''' (Yogurt-soup) (in [[Ardabil]]) |
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===Desserts=== |
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*'''Ghabli''' is traditional dish in Azerbaijan.This dish is made of rice, lentil, meat, potato and groats. |
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{{main list|List of Iranian desserts}} |
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In 400 BC, the ancient Iranians invented a special chilled food, made of [[rose water]] and [[vermicelli]], which was served to royalty in summertime.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.thenibble.com/reviews/main/desserts/the-history-of-ice-cream.asp|title=History of Ice Cream|work=thenibble.com}}</ref> The ice was mixed with [[saffron]], fruits, and various other flavors. Today, one of the most famous Iranian desserts in the semi-frozen noodle dessert known as ''[[faloodeh]]'', which has its roots in the city of [[Shiraz]], a former capital of the country.<ref name=ShirazSights>[http://www.bestirantravel.com/sights/shiraz/shiraz.html "Shiraz Sights"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160718185616/http://www.bestirantravel.com/sights/shiraz/shiraz.html |date=2016-07-18 }}, at ''BestIranTravel.com''</ref><ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ojc4Uker_V0C|title=Encyclopedia of Jewish Food|last=Marks|first=Gil|date=2010-11-17|publisher=Wiley|isbn=978-0-470-94354-0|language=en}}</ref> [[Bastani Sonnati|Bastani e zaferani]], [[Persian language|Persian]] for "saffron ice cream", is a traditional Iranian ice cream which is also commonly referred to as "the traditional ice cream". Other typical Iranian desserts include several forms of rice, wheat and dairy desserts. |
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The following is a list of several Iranian desserts. |
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* '''[[Karniyarik|Garniyarikh]]''' ("''the torn abdomen''" in [[Azerbaijani language|Azeri]]). |
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*'''Kufteh Tabrizi''' A kind of [[Kofta|Kofteh]] that unusually large. (see also [[Tabriz#Food and Confectionary|Kufteh Tabrizi]]) |
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{| class="wikitable" |
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*Tabriz is famous for its delicious cookies in Iran , some of which are ''[[Ghorabiye]], [[Eris cookie|Eris]], [[Nogha]] , [[Baklava]] '' and many others.[[Image:Ghorabiyeh.JPG|thumb|Sample of Tabrizi cookies:[[Ghorabiye]] ]] |
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|style="width: 20%;"|[[File:Fereni 1.jpg|center|160px]][[Rice pudding|Fereni]]: Sweet rice pudding flavored with [[rose water]].<ref>{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=eut7BwAAQBAJ |title=Authentic Iran: Modern Presentation of Ancient Recipes |chapter=Chapter 8 |page=186 |author=Vatandoust, Soraya.|date=13 March 2015 |isbn=978-1-4990-4061-6 }}</ref> |
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|style="width: 20%;"|[[File:Iranian sholezard for Nowruz.jpg|center|160px]][[Sholezard]]: Saffron rice-based dessert. |
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|style="width: 20%;"|[[File:Persian halva.jpg|center|160px]][[Halva]]: Wheat flour and butter, flavored with rose water. |
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|style="width: 20%;"|[[File:Saffron ice cream.jpg|center|160px]][[Bastani Sonnati|Bastani-e Zaferani]]: Saffron ice cream. |
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|[[File:Faloodeh1.jpg|center|110px]][[Faloodeh]]: [[Vermicelli]] mixed in a semi-frozen syrup of sugar and rose water. |
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|[[File:Kaymak in Turkey.jpg|center|170px]][[Kaymak|Sarshir]]: Creamy [[dairy product]] similar to [[clotted cream]]. |
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|[[File:Samanoo-Samanou-Persian-sweet-paste-for-Nowruz-Haft-Sin-Tablet.jpg|center|170px]][[Samanu]]: Germinated wheat, typically served for [[Nowruz]]. |
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===Snacks=== |
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[[Cookie]]s appear to have their origins in 7th-century Iran, shortly after the use of sugar became relatively common in the region.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://whatscookingamerica.net/History/CookieHistory.htm |title=History of Cookies - Cookie History |publisher=Whatscookingamerica.net |access-date=2015-02-27}}</ref> There are numerous traditional native and adopted types of snack food in modern Iran, of which some are listed within the following table. |
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{| class="wikitable" |
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*'''Ghovatou''' in [[Kermān Province|Kerman]] |
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*'''Ghaliye Mahi''' (fish soup) in [[Bushehr Province|Bushehr]] |
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|style="width: 20%;"|[[File:Fooman cookie.jpg|center|170px]][[Koloocheh|Koluche]]<nowiki/>h: Cookies, with major production in [[Fuman, Iran|Fuman]] and [[Lahijan]]. |
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|style="width: 20%;"|[[File:Loukoumades.jpg|center|150px]][[Lokma|Bamie]]<nowiki/>h: Deep fried dough soaked in sugar syrup. |
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|style="width: 20%;"|[[File:Baklava, Iranian Style.jpg|center|160px]][[Baklava|Baqlava]]: Pastry made of [[filo]], [[Nut (fruit)|nuts]], and sugar syrup. |
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|style="width: 20%;"|[[File:Reshteh khoshkar.jpg|center|150px]][[Reshteh khoshkar|Reshte Khoshkar]]: Fried and spiced rice flour and walnut. |
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|[[File:Gaz Candy From Iran.jpg|center|140px]][[Nougat]] and [[Gaz (candy)|Gaz]]: Made of sugar, nuts, and [[egg white]]. |
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|[[File:Sohan Halwa.JPG|center|110px]][[Sohan (confectionery)|Sohan]]: Saffron [[Brittle (food)|brittle]] candy with nuts. |
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|[[File:Sohan Asali.png|center|150px]][[Sohan Asali]]: [[Brittle (food)|Brittle]] candy with honey. |
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|[[File:Nan berenji.jpg|center|140px]][[Nan-e berenji|Nan-e Berenji]]: Rice flour cookies.<ref>{{Cite book |title=Persian Cooking: A Table of Exotic Delights |author=Ramazani, Nesta. |chapter=Rice Flour Cookies (Nan-e Berenji) |year=1997 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=GOidnQOUco0C&q=Nan+berenji&pg=PA227 |page=227 |isbn=978-0-936347-77-6 }}</ref> |
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|- |
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|[[File:Lovuez.png|center|150px]][[Tabrizi Lovuez]]: Diamond-shaped, made of [[Almond meal|almond powder]], sugar, and saffron. |
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|[[File:Shirini-e Nokhodchi close 150313 AW.jpg|center|150px]][[Nan-e Nokhodchi|Nokhodchi]]: [[Chickpea]] cookies.<ref>{{Cite book |title=Encyclopedia of Jewish Food |author=Marks, Gil. |chapter=Shirini |date=17 November 2010 |isbn=978-0-544-18631-6 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=gFK_yx7Ps7cC&q=Nokhodchi&pg=PT1088 }}</ref> |
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|[[File:Qottab 02.jpg|center|150px]][[Qottab]]: [[Almond]]-filled deep-fried pastry. |
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|[[File:Kolompeh-Kerman.png|center|90px]][[Kolompeh]]: [[Pie]] made of [[date palm|dates]] and [[cardamom]]. |
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|- |
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|[[File:Saffron rock candy.jpg|center|160px]][[Rock candy|Nabat]] : Rock candy, commonly flavored with saffron in Iran. |
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|[[File:Candyfloss (4825597893).jpg|center|170px]][[Pashmak]]: Cotton candy. |
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|[[File:Gorp.jpg|center|140px]][[Trail mix|Trail Mix]]: [[Dried fruit]], [[grain]]s, and [[nut (fruit)|nuts]]. |
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|[[File:Dulce de membrillo.jpg|center|130px]][[Quince cheese|Quince Cheese]]: Made of quince and sugar. |
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|[[File:Studentenfutter 01.JPG|center|160px]][[Ajîl-e Moshkel-goshâ|Ajil-e Moshkel-gosha]]: Traditional packed trail mix for [[Nowruz]]. |
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|[[File:Gosh-e-feel, Panjshir Restaurant.jpg|center|160px]][[Gosh-e Fil|Gush-e Fil]]: Dough topped with [[pistachio]]s [[powdered sugar]]. |
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|[[File:پولکی سوغات اصفهان (23).jpg|center|160px]][[Poolaki]]: Thin candy made of sugar, water, and white [[vinegar]]. |
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|[[File:Sujuq.jpg|center|160px]]Baslogh: Pastry made of grape syrup, starch and almond.<ref>{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=5JG_CAAAQBAJ |title=Veggiestan: A Vegetable Lover's Tour of the Middle East |author=Butcher, Sally. |chapter=Peckham Delight |date=18 November 2012 |isbn=978-1-909108-22-6 }}</ref> |
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|} |
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=== |
===Drinks=== |
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[[File:Lets have some tea (6323265930).jpg|thumb|upright|left|A cup of Iranian tea, served in Tehran]] |
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Iran is one of the world's major tea producers,<ref name=FAOSTAT>Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations—Production [http://faostat.fao.org/DesktopDefault.aspx?PageID=567&lang=en FAOSTAT] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111115042315/http://faostat.fao.org/DesktopDefault.aspx?PageID=567&lang=en |date=15 November 2011 }}. Retrieved 30 April 2010.</ref>{{Better source needed|date=January 2020}} mostly cultivated in its northern regions. In [[Culture of Iran|Iranian culture]], tea (''čāy'') is widely consumed<ref>{{Cite book |title=Iran - Culture Smart!: The Essential Guide to Customs & Culture |author=Williams, Stuart. |chapter=DRINKING |date=October 2008 |isbn=978-1-85733-598-9 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=YXYFAQAAQBAJ&q=%22Iranians+are+obsessive+tea+drinkers%22&pg=PT109 |quote=Iranians are obsessive tea drinkers }}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=36Xx7ChXJiAC |title=Iranian Rappers and Persian Porn: A Hitchhiker's Adventures in the New Iran |author=Maslin, Jamie. |date=13 October 2009 |quote=Iran is a nation of obsessive tea drinkers |page=58 |isbn=978-1-60239-791-0 }}</ref> and is typically the first thing offered to a guest.<ref>{{cite book|url=https://archive.org/details/iran00burk_0 |url-access=registration |quote=Iranian guest tea. |author1=Burke, Andrew |author2=Elliott, Mark |author3=Mohammadi, Kamin |author4=Yale, Pat |name-list-style=amp |title=Iran |publisher=[[Lonely Planet]] |year=2004 |isbn=1-74059-425-8 |pages=[https://archive.org/details/iran00burk_0/page/75 75]–76}}</ref> Iranians traditionally put a lump of [[sugarloaf|sugar cube]] in the mouth before drinking the tea.<ref>{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=lj0CeaIIETkC |title=Food, Cuisine, and Cultural Competency for Culinary, Hospitality, and Nutrition Professionals |author=Edelstein, Sari. |year=2011 |page=595 |publisher=Jones & Bartlett Learning |isbn=978-0-7637-5965-0 |quote=Tea is usually sweetened with lumps of sugar. Most Iranians sip their tea through these lumps of sugar by placing the lump inside their cheek }}</ref> [[Rock candy|Rock candies]] are also widely used, typically flavored with [[saffron]]. |
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*'''Angosht-pich''' in [[Hamadān Province|Hamadān]] |
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*'''[[Cotton candy|Pashmak]]''' and '''[[Baklava|Baghlavaa]]''' and '''[[Qottab]]''' in [[Yazd Province|Yazd]] |
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*'''Morasah-Polo''' in [[Tehran Province|Tehran]] |
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[[File: |
[[File:Pars Café, Lalezar, Tehran.jpg|thumb|upright|Café Pars, [[Tehran]] (1936)]] |
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Iran's traditional [[coffee]] (''qahve'', or ''kāfe'') is served strong, sweet, and "booby-trapped with a sediment of grounds".<ref name="andrewbruke">{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=gEca_4iSNCUC |title=Iran. Ediz. Inglese |author=Burke, Andrew |author2=Elliott, Mark |chapter=Coffee |date=15 September 2010 |page=81 |publisher=Lonely Planet |isbn=978-1-74220-349-2 }}</ref> In 16th-century [[Safavid dynasty|Safavid Iran]], coffee was initially used for medical purposes among the society.<ref>{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Kf0XfDMLndsC |title=The Pursuit of Pleasure: Drugs and Stimulants in Iranian History, 1500-1900 |author=Matthee, Rudolph P. |year=2005 |page=146 |publisher=Princeton University Press |isbn=0-691-11855-8 }}</ref> Traditional [[coffeehouse]]s were popular gatherings, in which people drank coffee, smoked tobacco, and recited poetry—especially the epic poems of ''[[Shahnameh]]''.<ref>{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=afsYCq1XOewC |title=Safavid Iran: Rebirth of a Persian Empire |author=Newman, Andrew J. |date=31 March 2006 |page=96 |publisher=Bloomsbury Academic |isbn=978-1-86064-667-6 }}</ref> In present-day Iran, cafés are trendy mostly in urban areas, where a variety of brews and desserts are served.<ref name="andrewbruke"/> [[Turkish coffee]] is also popular in Iran, more specifically among [[Iranian Azeris]].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.ricksteves.com/watch-read-listen/read/articles/getting-your-buzz-with-turkish-coffee|title=Getting Your Buzz with Turkish coffee|work=ricksteves.com|access-date=19 August 2015}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.bbc.com/travel/story/20140707-the-complicated-culture-of-bosnian-coffee|title=BBC - Travel - The complicated culture of Bosnian coffee|author=Brad Cohen|work=bbc.com|access-date=19 August 2015}}</ref> |
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[[Wine]] (''[[Persian wine|mey]]'') has also a significant presence in Iranian culture. [[Shirazi wine]] is Iran's historically most famous wine production, originating from the city of [[Shiraz]].<ref>{{cite book|author=Marjolein Muys|title=Substance Use Among Migrants: The Case of Iranians in Belgium|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=eYGiNAuxc68C&pg=PA78|date=1 April 2010|publisher=Asp / Vubpress / Upa|isbn=978-90-5487-564-2|pages=78–}}</ref><ref name="OCW Persia">Entry on ''"Persia"'' in J. Robinson (ed), ''"The Oxford Companion to Wine"'', Third Edition, p. 512-513, Oxford University Press 2006, {{ISBN|0-19-860990-6}}</ref><ref name="Hugh J">Hugh Johnson, ''"The Story of Wine"'', New Illustrated Edition, p. 58 & p. 131, Mitchell Beazley 2004, {{ISBN|1-84000-972-1}}</ref> By the 9th century, the city of Shiraz had already established a reputation for producing the finest wine in the world,<ref name="OCW Persia"/> and was Iran's wine capital. Since the [[Iranian Revolution|1979 Revolution]], alcoholic beverages [[Alcohol in Iran|have been prohibited in Iran]]; though non-Muslim recognized minorities (i.e. [[Christianity in Iran|Christians]], [[Persian Jews|Jews]], and [[Zoroastrians in Iran|Zoroastrians]]) are allowed to produce alcoholic beverages for their own use.<ref>{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=lj0CeaIIETkC |title=Food, Cuisine, and Cultural Competency for Culinary, Hospitality, and Nutrition Professionals |author=Edelstein, Sari. |year=2011 |page=595 |publisher=Jones & Bartlett Learning |isbn=978-0-7637-5965-0 |quote=Since the Islamic Revolution of 1979, alcoholic beverages have been strictly banned...non-Muslim minority groups...are entitled to produce wine for their own consumption. }}</ref> While non-alcoholic [[Beer in Iran|beer]] (''ābjow'') is available from legal outlets, other citizens prepare their alcoholic beverages illegally through the minority groups<ref>{{cite book|author=Afshin Molavi|title=The Soul of Iran: A Nation's Struggle for Freedom|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Za59PAytkFwC&pg=PA95|date=12 July 2010|publisher=W. W. Norton|isbn=978-0-393-07875-6|pages=95–}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|author=A. Christian Van Gorder|title=Christianity in Persia and the Status of Non-muslims in Iran|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FeHAxxEpe-cC&pg=PA195|year=2010|publisher=Rowman & Littlefield|isbn=978-0-7391-3609-6|pages=195–}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|author1=Kevin Boyle|author2=Juliet Sheen|title=Freedom of Religion and Belief: A World Report|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=JxgFWwK8dXwC&pg=PA423|date=7 March 2013|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-1-134-72229-7|pages=423–}}</ref> and largely from [[Iraqi Kurdistan]] and [[Turkey]].<ref>{{cite news|author=Saeed Kamali Dehghan |url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2012/jun/25/iranian-pair-death-penalty-alcohol |title=Iranian pair face death penalty after third alcohol offence | World news |work=The Guardian |date= 25 June 2012|access-date=2013-06-11 |location=London}}</ref> |
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===Kurdistan=== |
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[[Aragh Sagi|Araq sagi]], literally meaning "doggy distillate", is a type of [[distilled beverage|distilled alcoholic beverage]] in Iran which contains at least 65% pure ethanol. It is usually produced at homes from [[raisin]]s, and is similar to Turkish [[rakı]].<ref name=Skaljic>{{cite book |author=Abdulah Skaljic |title=Turcizmi u srpskohrvatskom-hrvatskosrpskom jeziku |location=Sarajevo |year=1985}}</ref> Prior to the 1979 Revolution, it had been produced traditionally in several cities of Iran. Since it was outlawed following the 1979 Revolution, it has become a black market and underground business. |
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*'''Kaak''', '''Naan-berenji''', '''Khoresht-e Khalal''' and '''Sibb-polo''' in [[Kermanshah Province|Kermanshah]] |
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*'''Yekaveh''', '''Gheimeh Tarreh''', '''Ash-e Shalami''' and '''Bourany''' in [[Kurdistan Province|Kurdistan]] |
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The following table lists several Iranian cold beverages. |
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==Traditional Iranian table settings== |
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{{clear}} |
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[[Image:Kababi alborz.jpg|thumb|Typical table setting and elements of a popular Iranian dish.]]The traditional Iranian table setting firstly involves the tablecloth, called ''sofreh'', and is spread out over a [[Persian rug]] or table. Main dishes are concentrated in the center, surrounded by smaller dishes containing appetizers, condiments, side dishes, as well as bread, all of which are nearest to the diners. These latter dishes are called ''mokhalafat'' (accompaniments). When the food has been served, an invitation is made to all those seated at the ''sofreh'' to help themselves. |
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{| class="wikitable" |
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|style="width: 20%;"|[[File:Tan-raffi kojian-IMG 3584.JPG|center|60px]][[Doogh]]: Cold [[yogurt]] drink, often made with salt, pepper, and other spices. |
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|style="width: 20%;"|[[File:Pomegranate Juice (2019).jpg|center|160px]][[Pomegranate juice|Pomegranate Juice]] |
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|style="width: 20%;"|[[File:GlassOfJuice and carrots.JPG|center|150px]][[Carrot juice|Carrot Juice]],<ref>{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=lj0CeaIIETkC |title=Food, Cuisine, and Cultural Competency for Culinary, Hospitality, and Nutrition Professionals |author=Edelstein, Sari. |year=2011 |page=595 |isbn=978-0-7637-5965-0 |quote=aab-e havij, a carrot juice }}</ref> sometimes mixed with [[Bastani Sonnati|ice cream]].<ref>{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=v-GACwAAQBAJ |title=Taste of Persia: A Cook's Travels Through Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Iran, and Kurdistan |author=Duguid, Naomi. |date=6 September 2016 |page=353 |isbn=978-1-57965-727-7 |quote=...havij bastani, a kind of ice cream float, made with Persian ice cream and carrot juice }}</ref> |
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|style="width: 20%;"|[[File:Khakshir (sisymbrium sophia seeds cold drink).jpg|center|150px]]Khakshir: Cold sweet drink with ''[[Descurainia sophia]]'' seeds.<ref>{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=30w-AQAAMAAJ |title=The Pharmaceutical Journal and Transactions, Volume 37 |author=J. & A. Churchill. |year=1878 |page=385 |quote=Khakshir is imported from Persia... }}</ref> |
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|- |
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|[[File:Sekanjebin (drink).jpg|center|160px]][[Sekanjabin|Sekanjebin]]: Cold drink made of honey and [[vinegar]]. |
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|[[File:Aragh sagi.jpg|center|50px]][[Aragh sagi|Aragh Sagi]]: A type of [[Distilled beverage|distilled alcoholic beverage]]. |
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|[[File:Orange blossom drink.jpg|center|100px]][[Sharbat (beverage)|Sharbat]]: Cold and sweet drink made of fruits or flower petals. |
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|[[File:Shiraz Grapes.jpg|center|150px]][[Shiraz wine|Shiraz Wine]]: Wine produced from [[Syrah|Shiraz grapes]] around the city of [[Shiraz]] in Iran. |
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|} |
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== |
==Regional Iranian cuisine== |
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'''Breakfast (''sobhaneh (صبحانه) or nāshtāyi (ناشتايى)'')'''<br /> |
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The basic traditional Iranian breakfast consists of a variety of flat breads (''naan-e sangak'', ''naan-e lavash'', and others), butter, [[Tabriz]]i white cheese (''paneer''), [[feta]] cheese, whipped heavy cream (''sarshir'', often sweetened), and a variety of fruit jams and spreads. Other popular traditional breakfasts (which require far more preparation) include ''[[haleem]]'' (wheatmeal served plain or more commonly with shredded lamb or turkey - similar to Western oatmeal in some respects), ''asheh mohshalah'' (thick soup). These latter breakfasts are typically regional specialities, and many cities and towns all across Iran feature their own distinct versions of these dishes. Both ''asheh mohshalah'' and ''haleem'' are typically prepared the night before, to be served the next morning, and ''haleem'' is usually only served at certain times of the year (haleem specialty restaurants are only open during those times), except in southern parts of Iran, where ''haleem'' is always present. ''Kaleh pacheh'' is almost always only served from three in the morning until sometime after dawn, and specialty restaurants (serving only kaleh pacheh) are only open during those hours. |
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===Azerbaijani cuisine=== |
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'''Lunch and dinner (''naahaar or shaam'')'''<br /> |
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Traditional Persian cooking is done in stages, at times needing hours of preparation and attention. The outcome is a well-balanced mixture of [[herb]]s, [[meat]], [[bean]]s, [[dairy product]]s, and [[vegetable]]s. Major staples of Iranian food that are usually eaten with every meal include [[rice]], various herbs ([[mentha|mint]], [[basil]], [[dill]], [[parsley]]), [[cheese]] ([[feta]] or Persian ''panir'', derived from goat or sheep's milk, and sometimes cow's milk), a variety of [[flat bread]]s, and some type of meat (usually [[poultry]], [[beef]], [[lamb (food)|lamb]], or [[fish (food)|fish]]). [[Stew]] over rice is by far the most popular dish, and the constitution of these vary by region. [[Tea]] (''chai'') is the drink of choice on nearly every occasion, and is usually served with dried fruit, pastries, or sweets. |
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{{main|Azerbaijani cuisine}} |
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The [[Iranian Azerbaijanis|Azerbaijani people]], living primarily in the region of [[Azerbaijan (Iran)|Azerbaijan]] in northwestern Iran, have a number of local dishes that include [[Bonab kababi|Bonab kabab]] (''{{lang|az|Binab kababı}}''),<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.khabaronline.ir/detail/134734/society/tourism |title=کباب بناب از کجا آمده است؟ |trans-title=Where has Bonab kebab come from? |language=fa |date=March 5, 2011 |work=Khabaronline News Agency}}</ref> the [[dumpling]] dish of [[joshpara]] (''{{lang|az|düşbərə}}''), an offal-based dish named jaqul baqul typically containing liver and heart,<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.tabnak.ir/fa/news/774270/طرز-تهیه-جغول-بغول |title=طرز تهیه جغول بغول |trans-title=Method of preparing Jaqul Baqul |work=Tabnak News |date=February 14, 2018 |language=fa}}</ref> a variety of [[āsh]] called ''{{lang|az|[[keledoş|kələcoş]]}}'',<ref>{{cite news |url=http://hamshahrionline.ir/details/206378 |title=آشنایی با غذاهای خوشمزه چهار گوشه ایران |trans-title=Getting to know delicious foods from the four corners of Iran |language=fa |work=Hamshahri |date=March 27, 2013}}</ref> a variation of [[gheimeh|qeyme]] that is called ''{{lang|az|[[pichagh-gheimeh|pıçaq]]}}'', and a variation of [[kofta|kufte]] that is called [[Tabriz meatballs]]. There is also the traditional pastry of [[shekerbura]] (''{{lang|az|şəkərbura}}''), which is identical to [[Khorasan Province|Khorasan]]'s [[shekarpareh|shekarpare]] ({{transliteration|fa|šekarpāre}}). Despite the influences from Turkey, the food tastes noticeably Iranian, though also with its own unique features, such as using more lemon juice and butter than other groups of Iranians.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=zzuiAwAAQBAJ |title=Food in Zones of Conflict: Cross-Disciplinary Perspectives |page=178 |first1=Paul |last1=Collinson |first2=Helen |last2=Macbeth |publisher=Berghahn Books |date=2014|isbn=978-1-78238-403-8 }}</ref> |
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=== Balochi cuisine === |
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You can usually find tea brewing throughout the day in most Iranian homes. [[Doogh]], a [[yogurt]] drink, is also quite popular. One of the oldest recipes, which can trace its existence back to the time of Persian empire, is ''[[fesenjan|khoresht-e-fesenjan]]'', consisting of [[duck]] or sometimes [[chicken]] in a rich [[walnut sauce#Bazha|pomegranate-and-walnut sauce]] that yields a distinctive brown color, most often served with white rice. |
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{{main|Balochi cuisine}} |
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Meat and dates are the main ingredients in the cuisine of Iran's southeastern region of [[Sistan and Baluchestan Province|Baluchistan]].<ref name="JamBaluch">{{cite news |url=http://jamejamonline.ir/sara/1048167109780914374/بفرمایید-غذاهای-بلوچی |title=بفرمایید غذاهای بلوچی |trans-title=Check out Baluchi foods |language=fa |work=Jam-e-Jam Online |date=May 18, 2013}}</ref><ref name="MehrBaluch">{{cite news |url=https://www.mehrnews.com/news/3579631/غذاهای-سنتی-سیستان-و-بلوچستان-ریشه-در-باور-و-طبیعت-دارد |title=غذاهای سنتی سیستان و بلوچستان ریشه در باور و طبیعت دارد |trans-title=The traditional foods of Sistan and Baluchistan are rooted in belief and nature |language=fa |work=Mehr News |date=March 14, 2016}}</ref> Rice is primarily cultivated in the region of [[Makran]].<ref name="JamBaluch"/><ref name="MehrBaluch"/> Foods that are specific to the Iranian region of Baluchistan include tanurche ({{transliteration|bal|tarōnča}}; {{transliteration|fa|tanurče}}), a local variety of grilled meat that is prepared in a [[tandoor|tanur]], doogh-pa ({{transliteration|bal|dōq-pâ}}), a type of [[khoresh]] that contains [[doogh]], and tabahag ({{transliteration|bal|tabâhag}}), that is meat prepared with pomegranate powder.<ref name="JamBaluch"/><ref name="MehrBaluch"/> Baluchi cuisine also includes several date-based dishes, as well as various types of bread.<ref name="JamBaluch"/><ref name="MehrBaluch"/> |
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===Caspian cuisine=== |
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==Fast food, imported and adapted foods== |
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{{See also|Caspian cuisine}} |
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Popular fast food items in Iran include [[chelow kabab]] (literally "rice and kabab"), [[Jujeh kabab|joojeh kabab]] (the same, but substituting grilled or broiled chicken), [[Nan-e kabab|naan o kabab]] (literally "bread with kabab"), kabab sandwiches, and a number of different derivatives of traditional slow-cooked meals. An increasing preference for [[American cuisine|American]] style food amongst a younger generation of Iranians has resulted in the establishment of many [[pizza]], [[steak]], [[hamburger]], and [[fried chicken]] establishments, but Western food is sometimes served alongside staples such as those mentioned above, and is often prepared differently (most notably with pizza). [[Chinese cuisine|Chinese]] and [[Japanese cuisine]] has also become popular in recent years, primarily in [[Tehran]], and [[Italian cuisine|Italian]] and [[Mediterranean cuisine|Mediterranean]] restaurants are also featured. The noted influence of European and American culture before the Islamic Revolution has also imparted preparations such as [[bechamel]], [[gigots]], [[milanesas]] and others to Iran. |
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The southern coast of the [[Caspian Sea]], which consists of the Iranian provinces of [[Gilan Province|Gilan]], [[Mazandaran Province|Mazanderan]], [[Alborz province|Alborz]], and [[Golestan Province|Golestan]], has a fertile environment that is also reflected in its cuisine.<ref>{{cite book |title=Lonely Planet Iran |last1=Burke |first1=Andrew |last2=Maxwell |first2=Virginia |year=2012 |isbn=978-1-74321-320-9 }}</ref><ref name="CasGuard">{{cite news |url=https://www.theguardian.com/travel/2016/oct/29/iran-food-tour-yasmin-khan-stews-kebabs-desserts |title=A foodie tour of Iran: it's poetry on a plate |work=The Guardian |date=October 29, 2016}}</ref> [[Kateh]] is a method of cooking rice that originates from this region.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=19C3DnJyWE0C |title=A Taste of Persia: An Introduction to Persian Cooking |publisher=I.B.Tauris |first=Najmieh |last=Batmanglij |year=2007 |page=87|isbn=978-1-84511-437-4 }}</ref> This type of rice dish is also eaten there as a breakfast meal, either heated with milk and jam or cold with cheese and garlic. [[Caviar]] fish roes also hail from this region, and are typically served with eggs in [[frittata]]s and [[omelette]]sor eaten simply with [[lavash]] and butter. Fish is commonly eaten in the [[Gilan province]], where [[Caspian kutum|Caspian Kutum]] is a staple<ref>{{Cite web |title=Iran ranks 14th among fishery producing countries |url=http://www.payvand.com/news/06/nov/1129.html |access-date=2023-03-29 |website=www.payvand.com |archive-date=29 March 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230329205523/http://www.payvand.com/news/06/nov/1129.html |url-status=dead }}</ref> and usually served fried<ref>{{Cite web |title=Sabzi Polo ba Mahi recipe - Fried fish with saffron and herb rice |url=https://www.hamisharafi.com/free-recipes/sabzi-polo-ba-mahi |access-date=2023-03-29 |website=I got it from my Maman |language=en-GB}}</ref> along with rice. [[Smoked fish]] ([[Persian language|Persian]]: ماهی دودی, [[Romanized]]: Mahi doodi) is also popular in Gilan<ref>{{Cite web |last=Foundation |first=Encyclopaedia Iranica |title=Welcome to Encyclopaedia Iranica |url=https://iranicaonline.org/ |access-date=2023-03-29 |website=iranicaonline.org |language=en-US}}</ref> and usually incorporated into rice by steaming the two together.<ref>{{Cite news |title=طرز تهیه ماهی دودی خوشمزه مخصوص گیلان |url=https://www.ilna.ir/بخش-%D8%B3%D8%A7%DB%8C%D8%B1-%D8%B1%D8%B3%D8%A7%D9%86%D9%87-%D9%87%D8%A7-10/1156765-%D8%B7%D8%B1%D8%B2-%D8%AA%D9%87%DB%8C%D9%87-%D9%85%D8%A7%D9%87%DB%8C-%D8%AF%D9%88%D8%AF%DB%8C-%D8%AE%D9%88%D8%B4%D9%85%D8%B2%D9%87-%D9%85%D8%AE%D8%B5%D9%88%D8%B5-%DA%AF%DB%8C%D9%84%D8%A7%D9%86 |access-date=2023-03-29 |website=خبرگزاری ایلنا |language=fa}}</ref> Local [[cookie]]s ([[Koloocheh|{{transliteration|fa|koluče}}]]) of the region are popular desert items,<ref name="CasGuard"/> particularly those from the region of [[Fuman, Iran|Fuman.]] Another notable dessert from this region is [[Reshteh khoshkar|Reshteh Khoshkar]] (Persian: رشتهخشکار), consisting of fried [[rice flour]] dough filled with sugar and nuts. [[Mespilus germanica|Medlar]] is also commonly eaten in Gilan<ref>{{Cite web |title=Bibalani G.H., Mosazadeh-Sayadmahaleh F. Medicinal benefits and usage of medlar (Mespilus germanica) in Gilan Province (Roudsar District), Iran. |url=https://scholar.google.com/scholar_lookup?journal=J.+Med.+Plants+Res.&title=Medicinal+benefits+and+usage+of+medlar+(Mespilus+germanica)+in+Gilan+Province+(Roudsar+District),+Iran&author=G.H.+Bibalani&author=F.+Mosazadeh-Sayadmahaleh&volume=6&publication_year=2012&pages=1155-1159&}}</ref> and locally referred to as "Konos" (Persian: کونوس). |
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===Kurdish cuisine=== |
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==Historical Iranian Cookbooks== |
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{{main|Kurdish cuisine}} |
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Although the Arabic cookbooks written under the rule of the [[Abbasid Caliphate]] include some recipes with Persian names and clearly derived from Persian cuisine , the earliest classical cookbooks in Persian that have survived are two volumes from the [[Safavid]] period. The older one is the ''Kār-nāmeh dar bāb-e tabbākhī va sanat-e ān'' "Manual on cooking and its craft" written in 927/1521 by Ḥājī Moḥammad-ʿAlī Bāvaṛčī Baḡdādī for an aristocratic patron at the end of the reign of [[Ismail I|Shah Esmail]] . The book originally contained twenty-six chapters, listed by the author in his introduction, but chapters 23-26 are missing from the unique surviving manuscript .The recipes include measurements for ingredients; often detailed directions for the preparation of dishes, including the types of utensils and pots to be used; and instructions for decorating and serving them. In general the ingredients and their combinations in various recipes do not differ significantly from those in use today. The large quantities specified, as well as the generous use of such luxury ingredients as saffron, suggest that these dishes were prepared for large aristocratic households, even though in his introduction , the author claimed to have written it ''for the benefit of the nobility, as well as the public''. |
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The [[Iranian Kurdistan|region of Kurdistan in western Iran]] is home to a variety of local [[āsh]], pilaf, and stew dishes.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://ostani.hamshahrilinks.org/addition/Contents-(1)/خوراک-جشن-دندان |title=خوراک جشن دندان |trans-title=Tooth celebration food |language=fa |work=Hamshahri |date=August 20, 2017 }}{{Dead link|date=February 2024 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref> Some local Kurdish dishes include a traditional grilled rib meat that is called {{transliteration|ku|dande kabāb}},<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.isna.ir/news/95072413347/دنده-کباب-کرمانشاه-ثبت-ملی-می-شود |title=دنده کباب' کرمانشاه ثبت ملی میشود' |trans-title="Kermanshah's 'dande kebab' gets national registration" |language=fa |work=ISNA |date=October 15, 2016}}</ref> a type of [[khoresh]] made of [[chives]] that is called {{transliteration|fa|xoreš-e tare}},<ref>{{cite news |url=http://hamshahrionline.ir/details/218886 |title=آشنایی با روش تهیه خورش تره، غذای کردی |trans-title=Introduction to the method of preparing chives khoresh, a Kurdish food |language=fa |work=Hamshahri |date=June 15, 2013}}</ref> and a dish of rice and potatoes that is called {{transliteration|fa|sib polow}}.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://isfahan.irib.ir/-/سیب-پلو |title=سیب پلو |trans-title=Apple Pilaf |language=fa |work=IRIB - Isfahan |access-date=April 23, 2018 }}{{Dead link|date=February 2024 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref> |
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===Southern Iranian cuisine=== |
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The second surviving Safavid cookbook, ''Māddat al-ḥayāt, resāla dar ʿelm-e ṭabbākī'' "The substance of life, a treatise on the art of cooking" was written about seventy-six years after the Kār-nāma by Nūr-Allāh, a chef for [[Abbas I of Persia|Shah Abbās]]. The introduction of that book includes elaborate praise of God, the prophets, the [[imam]]s, and the [[shah]], as well as a definition of a master chef. It is followed by six chapters on the preparation of various dishes: four on rice dishes, one on qalya, and one on Ash. The measurements and directions are not as detailed as in the Kār-nāma. The information provided is about dishes prepared at the royal court, including references to a few that had been created or improved by the shahs themselves; other famous contemporary cooks and their specialties are also mentioned<ref name="Encyclopædia Iranica COOKBOOKS">{{cite encyclopedia |last=Ghanoonparvar |first=Mohammad R. | title= COOKBOOKS | encyclopedia=Encyclopedia Iranica | accessdate=2009-04-05|url=http://www.iranica.com/newsite/index.isc?Article=http://209.85.229.132/search?q=cache:SzvDOAyX2qwJ:www.iranica.com/newsite/articles/unicode/v6f3/v6f3a002.html+site:www.iranica.com+cuisine&cd=2&hl=en&ct=clnk}}</ref>. |
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The food of southern Iran is typically spicy.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/travel/tours/10-foodie-ways-to-see-iran- |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220112/https://www.telegraph.co.uk/travel/tours/10-foodie-ways-to-see-iran- |archive-date=12 January 2022 |url-access=subscription |url-status=live |title=Taste of Persia: 10 foodie ways to see Iran |work=The Telegraph |date=April 6, 2016 |quote=The food of southern Iran is hot and spicy, just like its climate (...)}}{{cbignore}}</ref> [[Mahyawa]] is a tangy sauce made of fermented fish in this region.{{citation needed |date=April 2018}} Being a coastal region, [[Khuzestan Province|Khuzestan]]'s cuisine includes especially seafood, as well as some unique local beverages.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://iran-daily.com/News/132130.html |title=Khuzestan boasts assortment in cuisine |work=Iran Daily (IRNA) |date=December 4, 2015}}</ref> In southern Khuzestan, there is also a variation of [[kofta|kufte]] that is known as ''[[kibbeh]]'' and is made of ground meat, cracked wheat, different types of herbs and vegetables and various spices. |
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===Turkmen cuisine=== |
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The most popular contemporary Iranian cookbook is authored by [[Roza Montazemi]]. |
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{{main|Turkmen cuisine}} |
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Iran's [[Iranian Turkmen|Turkmen people]] are predominantly centered in the Iranian provinces of [[Golestan Province|Golestan]] and [[North Khorasan Province|North Khorasan]]. [[Chegdermeh|Chegderme]] ({{transliteration|fa|čekderme}}) is a Turkmen dish made of rice, meat, and tomato paste.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://jamejamonline.ir/sara/986860564985054410/چکدرمه-،-غذای-محلی-ترکمنها |title=چکدرمه'، غذای محلی ترکمنها' |trans-title="Chekderme", local food of the Turkmen |language=fa |date=March 30, 2013 |work=Jam-e-Jam Online}}</ref> |
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==Structure== |
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==Persian cuisine abroad== |
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===Meals=== |
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{{Original research|date=September 2007}} |
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One of the main reasons that Persian cuisine is not widely recognized is that it is often confused with [[Middle East]]ern cuisine, a much broader and more general term, and this confusion is further perpetuated by restaurants and markets providing authentic Persian cuisine that label themselves as such. |
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====Breakfast==== |
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Many Persian super-markets and restaurants are labelled as Middle Eastern, International, or [[Mediterranean]] in order to broaden their appeal to the Western consumer. In reality, Persian cuisine is one of the oldest and richest cuisines in the world, and- except for the shared dishes with neighbouring cuisines, during Ottoman contacts- is typically vastly different from what is found in the [[greater Middle East]]. |
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The basic traditional Iranian breakfast consists of a variety of flat breads, [[butter]] cubes, white cheese, whipped heavy cream ([[Kaymak|sarshir]]; often sweetened with honey), nuts (especially walnuts) and a variety of fruit jams and spreads. |
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Many cities and towns across Iran feature their own distinct versions of breakfast dishes. [[Khash (dish)|Pache]], a popular traditional dish widely eaten in Iran and the neighboring [[Caucasus]], is almost always only served from three in the morning until sometime after dawn, and specialty restaurants (serving only pache) are only open during those hours. |
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It should be mentioned that Persian cuisine has lots of similarity to Turkish and Greek cuisines in its Kebabs and other dishes as Greece and Turkey were part of the ancient great Persian empire. Although not widely recognised, Persian cuisine is gaining popularity in multicultural cities, especially in [[London]], [[Los Angeles]], [[Vancouver]], [[Washington, D.C.]], and [[Toronto]], which have a significant Persian population. Los Angeles and its environs, in particular, are well known for the number and quality of Persian restaurants which are usually centered around Kebab, but almost always also serve various stews as well. |
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====Lunch and dinner==== |
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Another reason for the relative obscurity of Persian cuisine is the lack of professional restaurant management. Many Persian restaurants (at least in smaller towns or those with smaller Persian populations) are started by immigrants who have little or no experience in the food and catering business. This lack of experience often means the proprietors focus most of their energies on preparing and providing good quality food but very little on marketing, ambience and service. Many such businesses die in obscurity despite the high quality and authenticity of their food. |
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Traditional Iranian cooking is done in stages, at times needing hours of preparation and attention. The outcome is a well-balanced mixture of herbs, meat, beans, dairy products, and vegetables. Major staples of Iranian food that are usually eaten with every meal include [[rice]], various herbs, cheese, a variety of flat breads, and some type of meat (usually [[poultry]], [[beef]], [[Lamb and mutton|lamb]], or [[Fish (food)|fish]]). Stew over rice is by far the most popular dish, and the constitution of these vary by region. |
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===Traditional table setting and etiquette=== |
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==Photo Gallery== |
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Traditional Iranian table setting firstly involves the tablecloth, called ''sofre'', and is spread out over either a table or a [[carpet|rug]]. Main dishes are concentrated in the middle, surrounded by smaller dishes containing appetizers, condiments, and side dishes, all of which are nearest to the diners. When the food is perfectly served, an invitation is made to seat at the ''sofre'' and start having the meal. |
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<center> |
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<gallery> |
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Image:Six types of caviar.jpg|Iranian caviar |
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Image:Fesenjan.jpg|A bowl of chicken [[fesenjan]], with Persian rice |
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File:Dizi.jpg|[[Abgoosht|Dizi]] |
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File:Dizi plate.jpg|[[Abgoosht]] plate |
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File:Nan sangak.jpg|''[[Sangak]]'' |
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File:Juje kabab.jpg|[[Jujeh kabab]] |
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File:Ash dogh01.jpg|''Ash dough'' (Yogurt-soup) of [[Ardabil]] |
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</gallery> |
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</center> |
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==See also== |
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== References and footnotes == |
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{{Portal|Iran|Food}} |
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{{reflist}} |
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*[[List of Iranian foods]] |
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*[[Mazanderani cuisine]] |
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* [[Kurdish cuisine]] |
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* [[Azerbaijani cuisine]] |
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* [[Agriculture in Iran]] |
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* [[Nimatnama-i-Nasiruddin-Shahi]], a medieval Indian Persian language cookbook |
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== |
==Notes== |
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{{notelist}} |
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==References== |
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*{{cite book |last=Batmanglij |first= Najmieh |title=New Food of Life |authorlink=Najmieh Batmanglij |coauthors= |year=1992 |publisher=Mage Publishers |location=Washington, DC |isbn=0934211345 |pages= }} |
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{{Reflist|30em}} |
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*{{cite book |last=Batmanglij |first= Najmieh |title=Silk Road Cooking: A Vegetarian Journey |authorlink= |coauthors= |year=2002 |publisher=Mage Publishers |location= |isbn=9780934211635 |pages= }} |
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*{{cite book |last=Batmanglij |first=Najmieh |title=A Taste of Persia: An Introduction to Persian Cooking |authorlink= |coauthors= |year=2006 |publisher=Mage Publishers |location= |isbn=9781933823133 |pages= }} |
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*{{cite book |last=Daniel |first=Elton L. |title=Culture and Customs of Iran |authorlink=Elton L. Daniel |coauthors=Mahdi, Ali Akbar |year=2006 |publisher=Greenwood Press |location= |isbn=9780313320538 |pages=149-155 }} |
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*{{cite book |last=Ghanoonparvar |first=Mohammad R. |title=Persian Cuisine: Traditional, Regional, and Modern Foods |authorlink= |coauthors= |year=2006 |publisher=Mazda Publishers |location= |isbn=9781568591919 |pages= }} |
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*{{cite book |last=Mazda |first=Maideh |title=In a Persian Kitchen |authorlink= |coauthors= |year=1960 |publisher=C. Tuttle |location= |isbn= |pages= }} |
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*{{cite book |last= |first= |title= |authorlink= |coauthors= |year= |publisher= |location= |isbn= |pages= }} |
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== |
==Further reading== |
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{{commons category|Cuisine of Iran}} |
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{{cookbook}} |
{{cookbook}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Daniel |first=Elton L. |title=Culture and Customs of Iran |author-link=Elton L. Daniel |author2=Mahdi, Ali Akbar |year=2006 |publisher=Greenwood Press |isbn=978-0-313-32053-8 |pages=149–155}} |
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{{col-begin}} |
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* {{cite encyclopedia |url=http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/spazi-cookery |title=ĀŠPAZĪ |trans-title=cooking |encyclopedia=Encyclopaedia Iranica |date=December 15, 1987}} |
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{{col-2}} |
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* {{cite book | last=Matthee | first=Rudolph | title=Oxford Handbook Topics in History | chapter=Patterns of Food Consumption in Early Modern Iran | publisher=Oxford University Press | date=2016-02-11 | isbn=978-0-19-993536-9 | doi=10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199935369.013.13}} |
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* [[Abgoosht]] |
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* {{cite book | last=Meybodi | first=Neda Mollakhalili | last2=Ebrahimi | first2=Maryam Tajabadi | last3=Mortazavian | first3=Amir Mohammad | title=Ethnic Fermented Foods and Alcoholic Beverages of Asia | chapter=Ethnic Fermented Foods and Beverage of Iran | publisher=Springer India | publication-place=New Delhi | date=2016 | isbn=978-81-322-2798-4 | doi=10.1007/978-81-322-2800-4_12}} |
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*[[Advieh]] |
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*[[Zam Zam Cola]] |
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*[[Culture of Iran]] |
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*[[Ghelyan]] |
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*[[Zereshk]] |
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*[[Kabab Koobideh]] |
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*[[Tursu]] |
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{{col-2}} |
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*[[Kabab Barg]] |
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*[[Polow]] |
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*[[Khoresht]] |
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*[[Samanu]] |
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*[[Tahdig]] |
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*[[Juglans regia|Persian walnut]] |
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*[[Gondi dumpling]] |
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*[[Tarhana|Tarkhine]] |
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{{col-end}} |
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{{Cuisine of Iran}} |
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==External links== |
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{{Middle Eastern cuisine}} |
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*[http://www.ferdussi.com/ Persian Food Restaurant in Orange County] |
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{{Asian topic|| cuisine}} |
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*[http://kalamala.com/recipe_browse.php Persian Food Recipes and Groceries from Kalamala.com] |
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*[http://www.persiancity.com/recipes/ Persian Food Recipes at persiancity.com] |
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*[http://www.faryadmagazine.com/food.html Easy Persian Food Recipes] |
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*[http://www.pariya.com Pariya Food] |
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*[http://www.bodazey.com/cuisine.html Iranian cuisine for Health, Body & Mind at BODAZEY.COM] |
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*{{dmoz|Home/Cooking/World_Cuisines/Middle_Eastern/Persian/|Persian Cuisine}} |
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*[http://www.hanifworld.com/Sofreh.htm Iranian Dining Table] Presenting Iranian meals and foods in six main categories |
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*[http://www.iranchamber.com/recipes/articles/history_of_icecream_iran.php History of ice cream in Iran] |
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*[http://www.persianfoods.info Traditional Iranian food recipes] |
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*[http://www.persian-recipes.com/ PERSIAN RECIPES] Popular Persian Recipes website/Blog with pictures |
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[http://www.uppersia.com/iran-travel-information/iranian-cuisine.html Iranian Cuisine] |
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[http://www.uppersia.com/persian-Iranian-recipes.html Persian Recipes] |
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{{Asia topic|title=[[Asian cuisine]]|prefix=Cuisine of}} |
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{{cuisine}} |
{{cuisine}} |
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{{Middle East topic |title=[[Middle Eastern cuisine]] |prefix=Cuisine of}} |
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{{Authority control}} |
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Iranian Cuisine}} |
{{DEFAULTSORT:Iranian Cuisine}} |
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[[Category:Iranian cuisine]] |
[[Category:Iranian cuisine| ]] |
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[[Category: |
[[Category:Cuisine by culture]] |
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[[Category: |
[[Category:Middle Eastern cuisine]] |
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[[Category:Persian culture]] |
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[[de:Persische Küche]] |
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[[es:Gastronomía de Irán]] |
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[[eo:Irana kuirarto]] |
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[[fa:آشپزی ایرانی]] |
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[[fr:Cuisine iranienne]] |
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[[nl:Iraanse keuken]] |
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[[tl:Lutuing Irani]] |
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[[uk:Іранська кухня]] |
Latest revision as of 00:25, 15 December 2024
Part of a series on the |
Culture of Iran |
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Iran portal |
Iranian cuisine is the culinary traditions of Iran. Due to the historically common usage of the term "Persia" to refer to Iran in the Western world,[2][3][4] it is alternatively known as Persian cuisine, despite Persians being only one of a multitude of Iranian ethnic groups who have contributed to Iran's culinary traditions.[a]
Iran has a variety of 2,500 types of traditional food, one of the richest in the world.[6] The cuisine of Iran has made extensive contact throughout its history with the cuisines of its neighbouring regions, including Caucasian cuisine, Central Asian cuisine, Greek cuisine, Levantine cuisine, Mesopotamian cuisine, Russian cuisine and Turkish cuisine.[7][8][9][10] Aspects of Iranian cuisine have also been significantly adopted by Indian cuisine and Pakistani cuisine through various historical Persianate sultanates that flourished during Muslim rule on the Indian subcontinent, with the most notable and impactful of these polities being the Mughal Empire.[11][12][13]
Typical Iranian main dishes are combinations of rice with meat, vegetables and nuts. Herbs are frequently used, along with fruits such as plums, pomegranates, quince, prunes, apricots and raisins. Characteristic Iranian spices and flavourings such as saffron, cardamom, and dried lime and other sources of sour flavoring, cinnamon, turmeric and parsley are mixed and used in various dishes.
Outside of Iran, a strong presence of Iranian cuisine can be found in cities with significant Iranian diaspora populations, namely the San Francisco Bay Area, Washington Metropolitan Area, Vancouver, Toronto,[14][15][16][17] Houston and especially Los Angeles and its environs.[14][15][18]
History
[edit]Among the writings available from the Middle Persian scripts, the treatise of Khosrow and Ridag, points about stews and foods and the way of using them and how they are obtained in the Sassanid period are found as valid references in compiling the history of cooking in Iran. The names of many of the Iranian dishes and culinary terms that have been translated can be seen in Arabic language books. Naturally the customs and habits of the Arabs influenced the Iranians [citation needed], specifically in Abbasid period.
Ancient Persian philosophers and physicians have influenced the preparation of Iranian foods to follow the rules of the strengthening and weakening characteristics of foods based on the Iranian traditional medicine.[19]
Historical Iranian cookbooks
[edit]Although the Arabic cookbooks written under the rule of the Abbasid Caliphate—one of the Arab caliphates which ruled Iran after the Muslim invasion—include some recipes with Iranian names, the earliest surviving classical cookbooks in Persian are two volumes from the Safavid period. The older one is entitled "Manual on cooking and its craft" (Kār-nāmeh dar bāb e tabbāxī va sanat e ān) written in 927/1521 for an aristocratic patron at the end of the reign of Ismail I. The book originally contained 26 chapters, listed by the author in his introduction, but chapters 23 through 26 are missing from the surviving manuscript. The recipes include measurements for ingredients—often detailed directions for the preparation of dishes, including the types of utensils and pots to be used—and instructions for decorating and serving them. In general, the ingredients and their combinations in various recipes do not differ significantly from those in use today. The large quantities specified, as well as the generous use of such luxury ingredients as saffron, suggest that these dishes were prepared for large aristocratic households, even though in his introduction, the author claimed to have written it "for the benefit of the nobility, as well as the public."
The second surviving Safavid cookbook, entitled "The substance of life, a treatise on the art of cooking" (Māddat al-ḥayāt, resāla dar ʿelm e ṭabbāxī), was written about 76 years later by a chef for Abbas I. The introduction of that book includes elaborate praise of God, the prophets, the imams, and the shah, as well as a definition of a master chef. It is followed by six chapters on the preparation of various dishes: four on rice dishes, one on qalya, and one on āsh. The measurements and directions are not as detailed as in the earlier book. The information provided is about dishes prepared at the royal court, including references to a few that had been created or improved by the shahs themselves. Other contemporary cooks and their specialties are also mentioned.[20]
Staple foods
[edit]Rice
[edit]The usage of rice, at first a specialty of the Safavid Empire's court cuisine, evolved by the end of the 16th century CE into a major branch of Iranian cookery.[21] Traditionally, rice was most prevalent as a major staple item in northern Iran and the homes of the wealthy, while bread was the dominant staple in the rest of the country.
Varieties of rice in Iran include gerde, domsia (literally meaning black-tail, because it is black at one end), champa, doodi (smoked rice), Lenjan (from Lenjan County), Tarom (from Tarom County), and anbarbu.
The following table includes three primary methods of cooking rice in Iran.
Method | Description |
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Polow and chelow | Chelow is plain rice served as an accompaniment to a stew or kebab, while polow is rice mixed with something. They are, however, cooked in the same way. Rice is prepared by soaking in salted water and then boiling it. The parboiled rice (called chelow) is drained and returned to the pot to be steamed. This method results in exceptionally fluffy rice with the rice grains separated and not sticky. A golden crust called tahdig or tadig is created at the bottom of the pot using a thin layer of bread or potato slices. Often, tahdig is served plain with only a rice crust. Meat, vegetables, nuts, and fruit are sometimes added in layers or mixed with the chelow and then steamed. When chelow is in the pot, the heat is reduced, and a thick cloth or towel is placed under the pot lid to absorb excess steam. |
Kateh | Rice that is cooked until the water is absorbed completely. It is the traditional dish of Gilan Province. |
Dami | Rice that is cooked almost the same as kateh, but at the start, ingredients that can be cooked thoroughly with the rice (such as grains and beans) are added. While making kateh, the heat is reduced to a minimum until the rice and other ingredients are almost cooked. If kept long enough on the stove without burning and over-cooking, dami and kateh can also produce tahdig. A special form of dami is tachin, which is a mixture of yogurt, chicken (or lamb), and rice, plus saffron and egg yolks. |
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Iranian-style rice-cooking
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Soaking rice in a pot
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Using potatoes as tahdig in chelow-style rice-cooking
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Potato tahdig
Bread
[edit]Second only to rice is the production and use of wheat. The following table lists several forms of flatbread and pastry bread commonly used in Iranian cuisine.
Lavash: Thin, flaky, and round or oval. It is the most common bread in Iran and the Caucasus. | Sangak: Plain, rectangular, or triangle-shaped leavened flatbread that is stone-baked. | Taftun: Thin, soft and round-shaped leavened flatbread that is thicker than lavash. | Qandi bread: A sweet bread, sometimes brioche-like and sometimes flat and dry.[22] | Barbari: Thick and oval flatbread; also known as Tabrizi, referring to the city of Tabriz. |
Baguette: A long, narrow French loaf, typically filled with sausages and vegetables. | Sheermal ("milk-rubbed"): A sweet pastry bread, also widely known as nan-e gisou | Komaj: A sweet date bread with turmeric and cumin, similar to nan e gisu.[23] |
Fruits and vegetables
[edit]The agriculture of Iran produces many fruits and vegetables. Thus, a bowl of fresh fruit is common on Iranian tables, and vegetables are standard side dishes in most meals. These are not only enjoyed fresh and ripe as desserts but are also combined with meat as accompaniments to main dishes.[24] When fresh fruits are not available, a large variety of dried fruits such as dates, figs, apricots, plums and peaches are served instead. Southern Iran is one of the world's major date producers, where some special cultivars such as the Bam date are grown.
Vegetables such as pumpkins, spinach, green beans, fava beans, courgette, varieties of squash, onion, garlic and carrot are commonly used in Iranian dishes. Tomatoes, cucumbers and scallion often accompany a meal. While the eggplant is "the potato of Iran",[25] Iranians are fond of fresh green salads dressed with olive oil, lemon juice, salt, chili, and garlic.
Fruit dolma is probably a specialty of Iranian cuisine. The fruit is first cooked, then stuffed with meat, seasonings, and sometimes tomato sauce. The dolma is then simmered in meat broth or ascallions sweet-and-sour sauce.[26]
Verjuice, a highly acidic juice made by pressing unripe grapes or other sour fruit, is used in various Iranian dishes.[27] It is mainly used within soup and stew dishes, but also to simmer a type of squash dolma. Unripe grapes are also used whole in some dishes such as khoresh-e ghooreh (lamb stew with sour grapes). As a spice, verjuice powder (pudr-e ghooreh) is sometimes reinforced by verjuice and then dried.
Typical spices
[edit]Advieh or chāshni refers to a wide variety of pungent vegetables and dried fruits that are used in Iranian cuisine to flavor food.
One of the traditional and most widespread Iranian spices is saffron, derived from the flower of Crocus sativus. Rose water, a flavored water made by steeping rose petals in water, is also a traditional and common ingredient in many Iranian dishes.
Persian hogweed (golpar), which grows wild in the humid mountainous regions of Iran, is used as a spice in various Iranian soups and stews. It is also mixed with vinegar into which broad beans are dipped before eating.
Some other common spices are cardamom, made from the seeds of several Elettaria and Amomum plants; shevid, an annual herb in the celery family Apiaceae; mahleb, an aromatic spice made from the seeds of Prunus mahaleb; and limu amani, dried lime.
There are also several traditional combinations of spices, two of which are arde (Tahini), made from toasted ground hulled sesame seeds, and delal sauce, made of heavily salted fresh herbs such as cilantro and parsley.
Typical food and drinks
[edit]Typical Iranian cuisine includes a wide variety of dishes, including several forms of kebab, stew, soup, and pilaf dishes, as well as various salads, desserts, pastries, and drinks.
Main course
[edit]Kebab
[edit]In Iran, kebabs are served either with rice or with bread. A dish of chelow white rice with kebab is called chelow kabab, which is considered the national dish of Iran. The rice can also be prepared using the kateh method, and hence the dish would be called kateh kebab.
The following table lists several forms of kebab used in Iranian cuisine.
Kabab Koobideh: Barbecued ground lamb or beef, mixed with parsley and onion. | Jujeh Kabab: Grilled chunks of chicken; one of the most common dishes in Iran.[28] | Kabab Barg: Barbecued and marinated lamb, chicken or beef. |
Kabab Torsh: Traditional kebab from Gilan and Mazenderan, marinated in a paste of crushed walnuts, pomegranate juice, and olive oil. | Kabab Bakhtyari: Mixture of barbecued fillet of lamb (or veal) and chicken breast.[29] | Chenje: Skewered and grilled cubes of meat. Iranian equivalent of shish kebab.[30] |
Shashlik: A popular form of shish kebab. In Iranian cuisine, shashlik is usually in form of large chunks. | Kabab Tabei: Homemade grilled meat, prepared on the pan.[31] | Bonab Kabab: A type of kebab that is made of ground mutton, onion, and salt in the city of Bonab. |
Stew
[edit]Khoresh is an Iranian form of stew, which is usually accompanied by a plate of white rice. A khoresh typically consists of herbs, fruits, and meat pieces, flavored with tomato paste, saffron, and pomegranate juice. Other non-khoresh types of stew such as dizi are accompanied by bread instead of rice.
Several Iranian stew dishes are listed within the following table.
Khoresh-e Bademjan: Eggplant stew with tomato, verjuice and saffron. | Khoresh-e Fesenjan: Stew flavored with pomegranate syrup and ground walnuts. | Khoresh-e Qeyme: Stew with split peas, French fries, and dried lime. | Qormeh Sabzi: Stew with herbs such as parsley, leek, cilantro, and fenugreek. |
Khoresh-e Karafs: Stewed celery and meat.[32] | Khoresh-e Alu: Stewed prunes and meat.[33] | Khoresh-e Alu Esfenaj: Stewed prunes, spinach, and meat.[34][35] | Khoresh-e Havij: Stewed carrots and meat.[36] |
Khoresh-e Qarch: Mushroom stew.[37] | Baqala Qatoq: Gilak stew with fava beans, dill, and eggs. | Dizi (piti): Mutton stew with chickpeas and potatoes. | Kuft-e Rize: Azerbaijani and Kurdish meatball stew. |
Khoresh-e Bamieh: Okra and meat stew. | Khoresh-e Kadu: Stewed zucchini and meat. |
Soup and āsh
[edit]There are various forms of soup in Iranian cuisine, including sup e jow (barley soup), sup e esfenaj (spinach soup), sup e qarch (mushroom soup), and several forms of thick soup. A thick soup is referred to as āsh in Iran, which is an Iranian traditional form of soup.[38] Also, shole qalamkar is the Iranian term for "hodge-podge" soup,[39] a soup made of a mixture of various ingredients.
The following table lists a number of soup and āsh dishes in Iranian cuisine.
Soup-e Morgh: Chicken and noodle soup.[40] | Soup-e Jow: Barley soup.[41] | Sirabi: Tripe soup; also known as sirab shirdun.[42] |
Tarkhineh: Grain and yoghurt soup. | Gazaneh: Nettle soup. | Adasi: Lentil soup. |
Āsh-e Reshte: Noodle thick soup. | Āsh-e Anār: Pomegranate thick soup. | Āsh-e Doogh: Buttermilk thick soup. |
Kalle Joosh: Kashk thick soup. | Bozbash: meat soup with red or white beans, green vegetables, herbs, onions and leeks, dried limes and spices. | Sholeh: Thick soup with meat, different legumes, bulgur, rice, nutmeg and other spices. Shole is originally from Mashhad. |
Polow and dami
[edit]Apart from dishes of rice with kebab or stew, there are various rice-based Iranian dishes cooked in the traditional methods of polow and dami.
Polow is the Persian word for pilaf and it is also used in other Iranian languages, in the English language it may have variations in spelling. A polow dish includes rice stuffed with cuts of vegetables, fruits, and beans, usually accompanied by either chicken or red meat. Dami dishes are similar to polow in that they involve various ingredients with rice, however they are cooked using the dami method of cooking the dish all in one pot.
The following are a number of traditional Iranian rice-based dishes:
Sabzi Polo: Rice with chopped herbs, usually served with fish. | Loobia Polo: Rice with green beans and minced meat. | Albalu Polo: Rice with sour cherries and slices of chicken or red meat. | Morasa Polo: Rice "jewelled" with barberries, pistachios, raisins, carrots, orange peel, and almonds.[43][44] |
Shirin Polo: Rice with sweet carrots, raisins, and almonds.[45] | Adas Polo: Rice with lentils, raisins, and dates.[46] | Baqali Polo: Rice with fava beans and dill weed.[47] | Dampokhtak: Turmeric rice with lima beans.[48] |
Tachin: Rice cake including yogurt, egg, and chicken fillets. | Kalam Polo: Rice with cabbage and different herbs. | Zereshk Polo: Rice with berberis and saffron. |
Other
[edit]Kuku: Whipped eggs folded in with herbs or potato. | Kotlet: Mixture of fried ground beef, mashed potato, and onion. | Olivier salad: Mixture of potato, eggs, peas, and diced chicken (or sausage), dressed with mayonnaise. | Caviar: Salt-cured fish eggs. |
Dolmeh: Stuffed peppers or vine leaves. | Kufte: Meatball or meatloaf dishes. | Zaban: Beef tongue. | Pache: Boiled parts of cow or sheep; also known as khash. |
Pirashki (pirozhki): Baked or fried buns stuffed with a variety of fillings. | Sosis Bandari: Traditional sausage with onion, tomato paste, and chili pepper. | Nargesi: A type of spinach omelette. | Sirabij: A type of garlic omelette. |
Gondi: Iranian Jewish dish of meatball. | Iranian pizza: A typical Iranian pizza. | Dopiaza: Traditional Shiraz curry prepared with a large quantity of onions. | Joshpara: Azerbaijani meat-filled dumplings. |
Tomato scrambled eggs: A dish made from eggs and tomato. | Jaqur-Baqur: A dish made from sheep's heart, liver and kidney. | Beryani: A traditional dish in Isfahan made from minced meat, fat, onion, cinnamon, saffron, walnut and mint that is served with baked lung. | Omelette: Originated in ancient Persia and was introduced worldwide in the 16th century. |
Appetizers
[edit]Torshi: Mixed pickles salad. | Salad Shirazi: Chopped cucumbers, tomato, and onion with verjuice and a little lemon juice. | Borani: Yogurt with spinach and other ingredients. | Mast-o Khiar: Strained yogurt with cucumber, garlic, and mint. |
Sabzi (greens): Fresh herbs and raw vegetables. | Zeytun Parvardeh: Olives in a paste made of pomegranate, walnut and garlic.[49] | Mirza Qasemi: Grilled eggplant with egg, garlic and tomato. | Kashk-e Bademjan: Mixture of kashk, eggplant and mint. |
Desserts
[edit]In 400 BC, the ancient Iranians invented a special chilled food, made of rose water and vermicelli, which was served to royalty in summertime.[50] The ice was mixed with saffron, fruits, and various other flavors. Today, one of the most famous Iranian desserts in the semi-frozen noodle dessert known as faloodeh, which has its roots in the city of Shiraz, a former capital of the country.[51][52] Bastani e zaferani, Persian for "saffron ice cream", is a traditional Iranian ice cream which is also commonly referred to as "the traditional ice cream". Other typical Iranian desserts include several forms of rice, wheat and dairy desserts.
The following is a list of several Iranian desserts.
Fereni: Sweet rice pudding flavored with rose water.[53] | Sholezard: Saffron rice-based dessert. | Halva: Wheat flour and butter, flavored with rose water. | Bastani-e Zaferani: Saffron ice cream. |
Faloodeh: Vermicelli mixed in a semi-frozen syrup of sugar and rose water. | Sarshir: Creamy dairy product similar to clotted cream. | Samanu: Germinated wheat, typically served for Nowruz. |
Snacks
[edit]Cookies appear to have their origins in 7th-century Iran, shortly after the use of sugar became relatively common in the region.[54] There are numerous traditional native and adopted types of snack food in modern Iran, of which some are listed within the following table.
Kolucheh: Cookies, with major production in Fuman and Lahijan. | Bamieh: Deep fried dough soaked in sugar syrup. | Baqlava: Pastry made of filo, nuts, and sugar syrup. | Reshte Khoshkar: Fried and spiced rice flour and walnut. |
Nougat and Gaz: Made of sugar, nuts, and egg white. | Sohan: Saffron brittle candy with nuts. | Sohan Asali: Brittle candy with honey. | Nan-e Berenji: Rice flour cookies.[55] |
Tabrizi Lovuez: Diamond-shaped, made of almond powder, sugar, and saffron. | Nokhodchi: Chickpea cookies.[56] | Qottab: Almond-filled deep-fried pastry. | Kolompeh: Pie made of dates and cardamom. |
Nabat : Rock candy, commonly flavored with saffron in Iran. | Pashmak: Cotton candy. | Trail Mix: Dried fruit, grains, and nuts. | Quince Cheese: Made of quince and sugar. |
Ajil-e Moshkel-gosha: Traditional packed trail mix for Nowruz. | Gush-e Fil: Dough topped with pistachios powdered sugar. | Poolaki: Thin candy made of sugar, water, and white vinegar. | Baslogh: Pastry made of grape syrup, starch and almond.[57] |
Drinks
[edit]Iran is one of the world's major tea producers,[58][better source needed] mostly cultivated in its northern regions. In Iranian culture, tea (čāy) is widely consumed[59][60] and is typically the first thing offered to a guest.[61] Iranians traditionally put a lump of sugar cube in the mouth before drinking the tea.[62] Rock candies are also widely used, typically flavored with saffron.
Iran's traditional coffee (qahve, or kāfe) is served strong, sweet, and "booby-trapped with a sediment of grounds".[63] In 16th-century Safavid Iran, coffee was initially used for medical purposes among the society.[64] Traditional coffeehouses were popular gatherings, in which people drank coffee, smoked tobacco, and recited poetry—especially the epic poems of Shahnameh.[65] In present-day Iran, cafés are trendy mostly in urban areas, where a variety of brews and desserts are served.[63] Turkish coffee is also popular in Iran, more specifically among Iranian Azeris.[66][67]
Wine (mey) has also a significant presence in Iranian culture. Shirazi wine is Iran's historically most famous wine production, originating from the city of Shiraz.[68][69][70] By the 9th century, the city of Shiraz had already established a reputation for producing the finest wine in the world,[69] and was Iran's wine capital. Since the 1979 Revolution, alcoholic beverages have been prohibited in Iran; though non-Muslim recognized minorities (i.e. Christians, Jews, and Zoroastrians) are allowed to produce alcoholic beverages for their own use.[71] While non-alcoholic beer (ābjow) is available from legal outlets, other citizens prepare their alcoholic beverages illegally through the minority groups[72][73][74] and largely from Iraqi Kurdistan and Turkey.[75]
Araq sagi, literally meaning "doggy distillate", is a type of distilled alcoholic beverage in Iran which contains at least 65% pure ethanol. It is usually produced at homes from raisins, and is similar to Turkish rakı.[76] Prior to the 1979 Revolution, it had been produced traditionally in several cities of Iran. Since it was outlawed following the 1979 Revolution, it has become a black market and underground business.
The following table lists several Iranian cold beverages.
Doogh: Cold yogurt drink, often made with salt, pepper, and other spices. | Pomegranate Juice | Carrot Juice,[77] sometimes mixed with ice cream.[78] | Khakshir: Cold sweet drink with Descurainia sophia seeds.[79] |
Sekanjebin: Cold drink made of honey and vinegar. | Aragh Sagi: A type of distilled alcoholic beverage. | Sharbat: Cold and sweet drink made of fruits or flower petals. | Shiraz Wine: Wine produced from Shiraz grapes around the city of Shiraz in Iran. |
Regional Iranian cuisine
[edit]Azerbaijani cuisine
[edit]The Azerbaijani people, living primarily in the region of Azerbaijan in northwestern Iran, have a number of local dishes that include Bonab kabab (Binab kababı),[80] the dumpling dish of joshpara (düşbərə), an offal-based dish named jaqul baqul typically containing liver and heart,[81] a variety of āsh called kələcoş,[82] a variation of qeyme that is called pıçaq, and a variation of kufte that is called Tabriz meatballs. There is also the traditional pastry of shekerbura (şəkərbura), which is identical to Khorasan's shekarpare (šekarpāre). Despite the influences from Turkey, the food tastes noticeably Iranian, though also with its own unique features, such as using more lemon juice and butter than other groups of Iranians.[83]
Balochi cuisine
[edit]Meat and dates are the main ingredients in the cuisine of Iran's southeastern region of Baluchistan.[84][85] Rice is primarily cultivated in the region of Makran.[84][85] Foods that are specific to the Iranian region of Baluchistan include tanurche (tarōnča; tanurče), a local variety of grilled meat that is prepared in a tanur, doogh-pa (dōq-pâ), a type of khoresh that contains doogh, and tabahag (tabâhag), that is meat prepared with pomegranate powder.[84][85] Baluchi cuisine also includes several date-based dishes, as well as various types of bread.[84][85]
Caspian cuisine
[edit]The southern coast of the Caspian Sea, which consists of the Iranian provinces of Gilan, Mazanderan, Alborz, and Golestan, has a fertile environment that is also reflected in its cuisine.[86][87] Kateh is a method of cooking rice that originates from this region.[88] This type of rice dish is also eaten there as a breakfast meal, either heated with milk and jam or cold with cheese and garlic. Caviar fish roes also hail from this region, and are typically served with eggs in frittatas and omelettesor eaten simply with lavash and butter. Fish is commonly eaten in the Gilan province, where Caspian Kutum is a staple[89] and usually served fried[90] along with rice. Smoked fish (Persian: ماهی دودی, Romanized: Mahi doodi) is also popular in Gilan[91] and usually incorporated into rice by steaming the two together.[92] Local cookies (koluče) of the region are popular desert items,[87] particularly those from the region of Fuman. Another notable dessert from this region is Reshteh Khoshkar (Persian: رشتهخشکار), consisting of fried rice flour dough filled with sugar and nuts. Medlar is also commonly eaten in Gilan[93] and locally referred to as "Konos" (Persian: کونوس).
Kurdish cuisine
[edit]The region of Kurdistan in western Iran is home to a variety of local āsh, pilaf, and stew dishes.[94] Some local Kurdish dishes include a traditional grilled rib meat that is called dande kabāb,[95] a type of khoresh made of chives that is called xoreš-e tare,[96] and a dish of rice and potatoes that is called sib polow.[97]
Southern Iranian cuisine
[edit]The food of southern Iran is typically spicy.[98] Mahyawa is a tangy sauce made of fermented fish in this region.[citation needed] Being a coastal region, Khuzestan's cuisine includes especially seafood, as well as some unique local beverages.[99] In southern Khuzestan, there is also a variation of kufte that is known as kibbeh and is made of ground meat, cracked wheat, different types of herbs and vegetables and various spices.
Turkmen cuisine
[edit]Iran's Turkmen people are predominantly centered in the Iranian provinces of Golestan and North Khorasan. Chegderme (čekderme) is a Turkmen dish made of rice, meat, and tomato paste.[100]
Structure
[edit]Meals
[edit]Breakfast
[edit]The basic traditional Iranian breakfast consists of a variety of flat breads, butter cubes, white cheese, whipped heavy cream (sarshir; often sweetened with honey), nuts (especially walnuts) and a variety of fruit jams and spreads.
Many cities and towns across Iran feature their own distinct versions of breakfast dishes. Pache, a popular traditional dish widely eaten in Iran and the neighboring Caucasus, is almost always only served from three in the morning until sometime after dawn, and specialty restaurants (serving only pache) are only open during those hours.
Lunch and dinner
[edit]Traditional Iranian cooking is done in stages, at times needing hours of preparation and attention. The outcome is a well-balanced mixture of herbs, meat, beans, dairy products, and vegetables. Major staples of Iranian food that are usually eaten with every meal include rice, various herbs, cheese, a variety of flat breads, and some type of meat (usually poultry, beef, lamb, or fish). Stew over rice is by far the most popular dish, and the constitution of these vary by region.
Traditional table setting and etiquette
[edit]Traditional Iranian table setting firstly involves the tablecloth, called sofre, and is spread out over either a table or a rug. Main dishes are concentrated in the middle, surrounded by smaller dishes containing appetizers, condiments, and side dishes, all of which are nearest to the diners. When the food is perfectly served, an invitation is made to seat at the sofre and start having the meal.
See also
[edit]- List of Iranian foods
- Mazanderani cuisine
- Kurdish cuisine
- Azerbaijani cuisine
- Agriculture in Iran
- Nimatnama-i-Nasiruddin-Shahi, a medieval Indian Persian language cookbook
Notes
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Walker, H. (1992). Oxford Symposium on Food and Cookery 1991: Public Eating: Proceedings. Proceedings of the Oxford Symposium on Food and Cookery. Prospect Books. p. 272. ISBN 978-0-907325-47-5. Retrieved 23 February 2023.
- ^ "Cultural Life". Tehrān. Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 16 April 2018.
Persian cuisine is characterized by the use of lime and saffron, the blend of meats with fruits and nuts, a unique way of cooking rice, and Iranian hospitality. Food is subtly spiced, delicate in flavour and appearance, and not typically hot or spicy. Many recipes date back to ancient times; Iran's historical contacts have assisted in the exchange of ingredients, flavours, textures, and styles with various cultures ranging from the Mediterranean Sea region to China, some of whom retain these influences today.
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- ^ Iran; international context for promoting Culinary Tourism
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sirabi-va-shirdun
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Iranians are obsessive tea drinkers
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Iran is a nation of obsessive tea drinkers
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Iranian guest tea.
- ^ Edelstein, Sari. (2011). Food, Cuisine, and Cultural Competency for Culinary, Hospitality, and Nutrition Professionals. Jones & Bartlett Learning. p. 595. ISBN 978-0-7637-5965-0.
Tea is usually sweetened with lumps of sugar. Most Iranians sip their tea through these lumps of sugar by placing the lump inside their cheek
- ^ a b Burke, Andrew; Elliott, Mark (15 September 2010). "Coffee". Iran. Ediz. Inglese. Lonely Planet. p. 81. ISBN 978-1-74220-349-2.
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- ^ Brad Cohen. "BBC - Travel - The complicated culture of Bosnian coffee". bbc.com. Retrieved 19 August 2015.
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- ^ a b Entry on "Persia" in J. Robinson (ed), "The Oxford Companion to Wine", Third Edition, p. 512-513, Oxford University Press 2006, ISBN 0-19-860990-6
- ^ Hugh Johnson, "The Story of Wine", New Illustrated Edition, p. 58 & p. 131, Mitchell Beazley 2004, ISBN 1-84000-972-1
- ^ Edelstein, Sari. (2011). Food, Cuisine, and Cultural Competency for Culinary, Hospitality, and Nutrition Professionals. Jones & Bartlett Learning. p. 595. ISBN 978-0-7637-5965-0.
Since the Islamic Revolution of 1979, alcoholic beverages have been strictly banned...non-Muslim minority groups...are entitled to produce wine for their own consumption.
- ^ Afshin Molavi (12 July 2010). The Soul of Iran: A Nation's Struggle for Freedom. W. W. Norton. pp. 95–. ISBN 978-0-393-07875-6.
- ^ A. Christian Van Gorder (2010). Christianity in Persia and the Status of Non-muslims in Iran. Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 195–. ISBN 978-0-7391-3609-6.
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- ^ Abdulah Skaljic (1985). Turcizmi u srpskohrvatskom-hrvatskosrpskom jeziku. Sarajevo.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ Edelstein, Sari. (2011). Food, Cuisine, and Cultural Competency for Culinary, Hospitality, and Nutrition Professionals. p. 595. ISBN 978-0-7637-5965-0.
aab-e havij, a carrot juice
- ^ Duguid, Naomi. (6 September 2016). Taste of Persia: A Cook's Travels Through Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Iran, and Kurdistan. p. 353. ISBN 978-1-57965-727-7.
...havij bastani, a kind of ice cream float, made with Persian ice cream and carrot juice
- ^ J. & A. Churchill. (1878). The Pharmaceutical Journal and Transactions, Volume 37. p. 385.
Khakshir is imported from Persia...
- ^ "کباب بناب از کجا آمده است؟" [Where has Bonab kebab come from?]. Khabaronline News Agency (in Persian). 5 March 2011.
- ^ "طرز تهیه جغول بغول" [Method of preparing Jaqul Baqul]. Tabnak News (in Persian). 14 February 2018.
- ^ "آشنایی با غذاهای خوشمزه چهار گوشه ایران" [Getting to know delicious foods from the four corners of Iran]. Hamshahri (in Persian). 27 March 2013.
- ^ Collinson, Paul; Macbeth, Helen (2014). Food in Zones of Conflict: Cross-Disciplinary Perspectives. Berghahn Books. p. 178. ISBN 978-1-78238-403-8.
- ^ a b c d "بفرمایید غذاهای بلوچی" [Check out Baluchi foods]. Jam-e-Jam Online (in Persian). 18 May 2013.
- ^ a b c d "غذاهای سنتی سیستان و بلوچستان ریشه در باور و طبیعت دارد" [The traditional foods of Sistan and Baluchistan are rooted in belief and nature]. Mehr News (in Persian). 14 March 2016.
- ^ Burke, Andrew; Maxwell, Virginia (2012). Lonely Planet Iran. ISBN 978-1-74321-320-9.
- ^ a b "A foodie tour of Iran: it's poetry on a plate". The Guardian. 29 October 2016.
- ^ Batmanglij, Najmieh (2007). A Taste of Persia: An Introduction to Persian Cooking. I.B.Tauris. p. 87. ISBN 978-1-84511-437-4.
- ^ "Iran ranks 14th among fishery producing countries". www.payvand.com. Archived from the original on 29 March 2023. Retrieved 29 March 2023.
- ^ "Sabzi Polo ba Mahi recipe - Fried fish with saffron and herb rice". I got it from my Maman. Retrieved 29 March 2023.
- ^ Foundation, Encyclopaedia Iranica. "Welcome to Encyclopaedia Iranica". iranicaonline.org. Retrieved 29 March 2023.
- ^ "طرز تهیه ماهی دودی خوشمزه مخصوص گیلان". خبرگزاری ایلنا (in Persian). Retrieved 29 March 2023.
- ^ "Bibalani G.H., Mosazadeh-Sayadmahaleh F. Medicinal benefits and usage of medlar (Mespilus germanica) in Gilan Province (Roudsar District), Iran".
- ^ "خوراک جشن دندان" [Tooth celebration food]. Hamshahri (in Persian). 20 August 2017.[permanent dead link ]
- ^ "دنده کباب' کرمانشاه ثبت ملی میشود'" ["Kermanshah's 'dande kebab' gets national registration"]. ISNA (in Persian). 15 October 2016.
- ^ "آشنایی با روش تهیه خورش تره، غذای کردی" [Introduction to the method of preparing chives khoresh, a Kurdish food]. Hamshahri (in Persian). 15 June 2013.
- ^ "سیب پلو" [Apple Pilaf]. IRIB - Isfahan (in Persian). Retrieved 23 April 2018.[permanent dead link ]
- ^ "Taste of Persia: 10 foodie ways to see Iran". The Telegraph. 6 April 2016. Archived from the original on 12 January 2022.
The food of southern Iran is hot and spicy, just like its climate (...)
- ^ "Khuzestan boasts assortment in cuisine". Iran Daily (IRNA). 4 December 2015.
- ^ "چکدرمه'، غذای محلی ترکمنها'" ["Chekderme", local food of the Turkmen]. Jam-e-Jam Online (in Persian). 30 March 2013.
Further reading
[edit]- Daniel, Elton L.; Mahdi, Ali Akbar (2006). Culture and Customs of Iran. Greenwood Press. pp. 149–155. ISBN 978-0-313-32053-8.
- "ĀŠPAZĪ" [cooking]. Encyclopaedia Iranica. 15 December 1987.
- Matthee, Rudolph (11 February 2016). "Patterns of Food Consumption in Early Modern Iran". Oxford Handbook Topics in History. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199935369.013.13. ISBN 978-0-19-993536-9.
- Meybodi, Neda Mollakhalili; Ebrahimi, Maryam Tajabadi; Mortazavian, Amir Mohammad (2016). "Ethnic Fermented Foods and Beverage of Iran". Ethnic Fermented Foods and Alcoholic Beverages of Asia. New Delhi: Springer India. doi:10.1007/978-81-322-2800-4_12. ISBN 978-81-322-2798-4.