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Fahsa (Arabic: فحسة, romanized: Fahsa) is a Yemeni stew. It is made of lamb cutlets with lamb broth . [ 1 ] Spices and hilbah (a dip made with fenugreek ) [ 2 ] are added after cooking.
Mujaddara is the Arabic word for "pockmarked"; the lentils among the rice resemble pockmarks. [2] [3] The first recorded recipe for mujaddara appears in Kitab al-Tabikh, a cookbook compiled in 1226 by al-Baghdadi in Iraq. [3] Containing rice, lentils, and meat, it was served this way during celebrations. [3]
Fusha is the Arabic name for Modern Standard Arabic. Fusha may also refer to: Classical Arabic; Fusha, Guangdong (阜沙鎮), a town in the city of Zhongshan, Guangdong Province of China; Fushë-Krujë, Albania
Drinks are not necessarily served with the food; however, there is a very wide variety of drinks such as shineena (or laban), karakaden, Naqe'e Al Zabib, Irq Soos, Tamr Hindi, and fruit juice, as well as other traditional Arabic drinks. During the 20th century, carbonated soda and fruit-based drinks have also become very popular.
Flatbreads have been present in the Fertile Crescent since prehistoric times. They have been cooked on hot surfaces such as stones, a metal sajj plate, taboon, or tandoor.In the medieval Arab world, with the development of the brick oven or furn, a wide variety of flatbreads baked together with stuffings or toppings emerged, including sfiha, and spread across the Ottoman Empire.
Mulukhiyah (Arabic: ملوخية, romanized: mulūkhiyyah), also known as mulukhiyya, molokhiyya, melokhiyya, or ewédú, is a type of jute plant and a dish made from the leaves of Corchorus olitorius, commonly known in English as jute, jute leaves, jute mallow, nalta jute, or tossa jute.
A dish of booza topped with pistachios served at the Bakdash ice cream shop in Damascus. Booza (Arabic: بُوظَة, romanized: Būẓah, lit. 'ice cream') is a frozen dairy dessert originally from the Levant made with milk, cream, sugar, mastic and sahlab (orchid flour), giving it its distinguished stretchy and chewy texture—much like dondurma.
Falafel is a common form of street food or fast food in Egypt, across the Levant, and in the wider Middle East. [ 24 ] [ 25 ] The croquettes are regularly eaten as part of meze . During Ramadan , falafel balls are sometimes eaten as part of the iftar , the meal that breaks the daily fast after sunset. [ 8 ]