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Afghan cuisine

Afghan cuisine (Pashto: افغان پخلی, romanized: Afghan Pakhlai, Dari: آشپزی افغانی, romanized: Āshpazi-e Afghāni) is influenced to a certain extent by Persian, Central Asian and Indian cuisines due to Afghanistan's close proximity and cultural ties.[1][2] The cuisine is halal and mainly based on mutton, beef, poultry and fish with rice and Afghan bread. Accompanying these are common vegetables and dairy products, such as milk, yogurt, whey, etc.,[3] and fresh and dried fruits such as apples, apricots, grapes, bananas, oranges, plums, pomegranates, sweet melons, raisin, etc.[4] The diet of most Afghans revolve around rice-based dishes, while various forms of naan is consumed with most meals.[5] Tea is generally consumed daily in large quantities, and is a major part of hospitality.[6] The culinary specialties reflect the nation's ethnic and geographic diversity. The national dish of Afghanistan is Kabuli palaw, a rice dish cooked with raisins, carrots, nuts and lamb or beef.[7]

Background

 
Location of Afghanistan in Asia

The cuisine of Afghanistan is halal and has elements from various places, for example garam masala from India, coriander and mint from Iran, dumplings and noodles from Uzbekistan and Xinjiang in China, and Baklava from Turkey. [8][9] The similarities can be seen in the use of spices like cumin and cinnamon (as in Indian cuisine), green cardamom flavors (as in Chinese tea), and kebabs and yoghurts (as in Turkish and Arabic cuisines).[10]

Staple foods

Rice

 
 
Rice with kofta (meatballs) and corn

Rice is a core staple food in Afghan cuisine and the most important part of any meal.[9] Biryani is one of the lesser popular rice dishes in Afghanistan. It is consumed mostly in cities closer to neighboring Pakistan, such as Kandahar, Jalalabad and Khost. Challow, or white rice cooked with mild spices,[11] is served mainly with qormas (korma: stews or casseroles). Palaw is cooked similarly to challow, but a combination of meat, stock, qorma, and herbs are also mixed in before baking, resulting in the elaborate colors, flavors, and aromas from which the rice got its name. Sometimes caramelized sugar is used to give the rice a rich brown color. Examples of palaw include:

  • Kabuli palaw (the national dish[7]) – meat and stock are added, plus a topping of fried raisins, slivered carrots, and pistachios
  • Yakhni palaw – meat and stock are added to give the rice a brown color
  • Zamarod palaw – spinach qorma is mixed in before the baking process, hence zamarod, meaning "emerald"
  • Bore palaw – lawand is added giving the rice a yellow color
  • Landi palaw – a traditional meal of rice (with stock made from chicken or mutton that has been salted and dried in the sun)
  • Bonjan-e-roomi palaw – bonjan-e-roomi (tomato qorma) is added during baking giving the rice a red color
  • Serkah palaw – similar to yakhni pulao, but with vinegar and other spices
  • Shibet palaw – fresh dill and raisins are added during baking
  • Narenj palaw – a sweet elaborate rice dish made with saffron, orange peel, pistachios, almonds, and chicken
  • Maash palaw – a strictly vegetarian sweet-and-sour pilaf baked with mung beans, apricots, and bulgur wheat
  • Alou balou palaw – a sweet rice dish with plums and chicken

Afghan bread

 
Naan (bread) from a local baker, the most widely consumed bread in Afghanistan

Afghan bread is flat and cooked in a tanoor or tandoor (a vertical ground clay oven). The bread is slapped onto a stone wall to cook. Tabakhai is a flatbread cooked on a flat upside down pan.

Major dishes

Steamed dumplings

 
Mantu in a steamer before cooking
 
Afghan aushak

There is a wide variety of dumplings. Known under the name khameerbob and often eaten as dumplings, these native dishes are popular. Due to the long time required to make the dough for the dumplings, they are rarely served at large gatherings, such as weddings. They are instead served on special occasions at home.[citation needed]

  • Aushak – dumplings filled with a mixture consisting mainly of leeks, topped with either garlic-mint qoroot or a garlic yogurt sauce, sautéed tomatoes, red kidney beans, and a well-seasoned ground-meat mixture (It is a dish associated with Kabul, the capital of Afghanistan.)
  • Mantu – steamed dumplings filled with onion and ground beef or lamb, usually topped with a tomato- and yogurt- or qoroot-based sauce and then garnished with dried mint and coriander (The yogurt-based topping is usually a mixture of yogurt, garlic, and split chickpeas. The qoroot-based sauce is made of goat's cheese and also mixed with garlic; a qoroot and yogurt mixture will sometimes be used.)

Qormah

Qormah (also spelled "korma" or "qorma") is an onion- and tomato-based stew or casserole usually served with challow rice.[3] First, onion is caramelized, for a richly colored stew. Then tomato is added, along with a variety of fruits, spices, and vegetables, depending on the recipe. The main ingredient, which can be meat or other vegetables, is added last. There are hundreds of different types of qormahs including:

  • Qormah e gosht (meat qormah) – usually the main qormah served with palaw at gatherings
  • Qormah e alou-bokhara wa dalnakhod – onion-based using veal or chicken, sour plums, lentils, and cardamom
  • Qormah e nadroo – onion-based, using lamb meat or veal, yogurt, lotus roots, cilantro, and coriander
  • Qormah e lawand – onion-based, using chicken, lamb, or beef, plus yogurt, turmeric, and cilantro
  • Qormah e sabzi – lamb, sautéed spinach, and other greens
  • Qormah e shalgham – onion-based using lamb, turnips, and sugar (sweet and sour taste)

Kabob

 

Afghan kabob is most often found in restaurants and at outdoor street vendor stalls. Most of the time, it contains lamb meat. Kabob is made with naan instead of rice. Customers have the option to sprinkle sumac or ghora (dried ground sour grapes) on their kabob. Pieces of fat from the sheep's tail (jijeq) are usually added to the skewers to add extra flavor.

 
Chopan kabob being prepared

Other popular kabobs include the lamb chop, ribs, kofta (ground beef), and chicken.

Chapli kebab, a specialty of eastern Afghanistan, is a patty of minced beef. It is a popular barbecue meal in both Pakistan and Afghanistan. It is prepared flat and round and served with naan. The original recipe of chapli kabob dictates a half meat, half flour mixture which renders it lighter in taste and less expensive.

Chicken

Afghan chicken or murgh-e Afghan is a classic example of one of the most famous dishes of Afghanistan. Chicken dishes are usually found in restaurants and at outdoor street vendor stalls. Unlike in the Indian cooking style, chicken in Afghan cuisine is often used with the intention that it be halal. Cream, butter, and curd are customary ingredients in all chicken recipes, whether served as an appetizer or a main course.

Quroot

Quroot (or qoroot) is a reconstituted dairy product, traditionally a by-product of butter made from sheep's or goat's milk. The residual buttermilk remaining after churning butter is soured further (by keeping it at room temperature for a few days), treated with salt, and then eventually boiled. The precipitated casein is filtered through cheesecloth, pressed in order to remove liquid, and then shaped into balls; the product is thus a hard and very sour cottage cheese. Though it can be eaten raw as a savory snack, it is typically served with cooked Afghan dishes such as aushak, mantu, and kichri qoroot.

Miscellaneous

 
A table setting of Afghan food in Kabul
 
Badenjan (eggplant) is usually served for lunch as a light meal or as a side dish. It tastes best with freshly baked bread along with sour minted yogurt. Shomleh/shlombeh (a cold drink made of yogurt that is sprinkled with fresh or dried mint).
 
Afghan men eating at a lunchtime feast in Kunar Weleyat

Desserts and snacks

 
Samples of Afghan fresh and dried fruits

As a desert after a meal, most Afghans generally eat fresh fruits such as apples, apricots, bananas, grapes, mangoes, melons, oranges, pears, pomegranates, etc. For snacks, they drink tea with something sweet like cakes, cookies or pastries. On some occasions they also eat dried fruits which are always widely available in every Afghan market. Others may eat any of the following:

Soups

  • Shorba (Afghan soup similar to borscht)
  • Shorwa-E-Tarkari[17] (meat and vegetable soup)
  • Peyawa or Eshkana (a soup based on flour, very similar to a gravy, but mixed with chopped onion, potatoes, and eggs)
  • Aushe Sarka (vinegar-based flat noodle soup, tastes very similar to Chinese hot and sour soup)

Drinks

Chai

 
Village elders and US special forces drinking Afghan green tea in 2007

Chai is tea in Afghanistan, which can either be green or black. It is consumed at all times, especially a short time after finishing a meal or with guests during any social gathering. Most people drink green tea with no sugar. Some add cardamom, saffron, or sugar.

Sheer chai (which translates from "milk tea") is also consumed but mostly in the morning and on special occasions. It is a type of Kashmiri chai. Many people of Afghanistan also drink masala chai, particularly in cities such as Asadabad, Jalalabad, Khost and Kandahar.

Doogh

Doogh (also known by some Afghans as shomleh or shlombeh) is a cold drink made by mixing water with yogurt and then adding fresh or dried mint. Some variations of doogh include the addition of crushed or diced cucumber chunks. It is the second most widely consumed drink in Afghanistan (the first being tea), especially during lunchtime in summer. Doogh can be found at almost every Afghan grocery store and is served in restaurants.

Eating habits

Sub-cuisines

While Afghans have a common cuisine, certain ethnicities form sub-variations of it.

Pashtun cuisine

Pashtuns are the largest ethnic group of Afghanistan, constituting about 42% of the country's total population.[18] A major dish in Pashtun culture are Rosh (cooked lamb and mutton with no spices)[15] and Sohbat, found at traditional gatherings and events.[19][20] Other major Pashtun dishes include lamb-skewered sajji and chapli kebab. The name dampukht stands for steamed meat, and Khaddi kebab is the Afghan shashlik, which is grilled on an open fire, on a spit.[21]

Although it differs from region to region, Pashtun cuisine is meat-heavy and often includes caramelized rice. For example, the dish known as bolani in the north and east is often called borogyen in the south and west of Afghanistan.

Common summer beverages include shlombeh, also known in Persian as doogh, a drink consisting of liquid yogurt, mint, and bedreng (Afghan cucumber). Sherbet is an ice-sugared cold drink. Sheer yakh is a sweet ice-like product, literally translating to "cold milk".[21]

Hazara cuisine

The Hazara people in central Afghanistan (in the region of Hazarajat) and western Pakistan (Balochistan province) have their own fare. The Hazaragi cuisine shares some similarities with neighboring regional cuisines, so it is mainly influenced by Central Asian, Persian, and South Asian cooking. However, cooking methods vary in some of the dishes of these neighboring cuisines.

Dining etiquette

Traditionally, dinners are held on a tablecloth on the floor, which is called the dastarkhan. Meals are normally eaten with the right hand. After a meal, tea with dessert is served.[9]

Special occasions

Serving tea and white sugared almonds (called nuql) is customary during Afghan festivals.[3][22]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Exile on Charles Street: Restaurateur Qayum Karzai's life is split between Baltimore and his native Afghanistan". Baynard Woods. The Baltimore Sun. 3 March 2015. Retrieved 2021-12-27.
  2. ^ "About Afghan food". SBS. 31 March 2021. Retrieved 13 November 2021.
  3. ^ a b c Brittin, Helen (2011). The Food and Culture Around the World Handbook. Boston: Prentice Hall. pp. 20–21. ISBN 9780135074817.
  4. ^ . Baker Creek Heirloom Seeds. Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2013-10-28.
  5. ^ "What to eat and drink in Afghanistan".
  6. ^ "Sheer Chai Afghan (Cardamom Tea with milk)". July 2020.
  7. ^ a b Ali, Tanveer (31 July 2012). "Everything You Need To Know About Afghan Food". foodrepublic. Retrieved 2014-02-19.
  8. ^ "What do Afghan families like to eat for three meals a day? Why is it the healthiest country in the world?". iNews. 15 December 2022. Retrieved 15 December 2022.
  9. ^ a b c Linda McElroy. "Customs and Cuisine of Afghanistan".
  10. ^ Venkatraman, Vijaysree (6 December 2006). "Discovering Afghan Cuisine, a World Away". NPR.
  11. ^ "Afghan Cuisine: Challow". Afghanistan Online. 2018-04-09. Retrieved 2021-10-18.
  12. ^ "Afghan Chatni made with fresh cilantro leaves, « WATAN CHAT". March 12, 2017.
  13. ^ Dea, Cynthia (March 9, 2015). "Where to Find the Best Meatballs in Los Angeles". KCET. Retrieved 2022-12-30.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  14. ^ Chef », This. "Khajoor | Afghan Kitchen Recipes".
  15. ^ a b آغا جان ماما مشهوره روش، کندهار Popular Rosh, Kandahar on YouTube
  16. ^ Firni Recipe Easy Dessert Recipe, Afghani Cuisine Firni , Phirni,Easy Sweet Dish Recipe ,فرنی افغانی on YouTube
  17. ^ Chef », This. "Shorwa-E-Tarkari (Meat & Veg Soup) | Afghan Kitchen Recipes".
  18. ^ "The Ethnic Groups Of Afghanistan". WorldAtlas. 10 September 2019.
  19. ^ "Sohbat: The Pashtun Dish That Brings People Together". www.gounesco.com. 5 August 2016.
  20. ^ ayesha.ibrahim (2016-08-05). "Sohbat: The Pashtun Dish That Brings People Together". Make Heritage Fun!. Retrieved 2021-08-18.
  21. ^ a b Safia Haleem (1 May 2013). Pakistan – Culture Smart!: The Essential Guide to Customs & Culture. Kuperard. pp. 98–. ISBN 978-1-85733-678-8.
  22. ^ "Afghan Cookbook". afghancookbook.tumblr.com.

Further reading

  • Helen J. Saberi (1997). "Travel and Food in Afghanistan". In Harlan Walker (ed.). Food on the Move: Proceedings of the Oxford Symposium on Food and Cookery, 1996. Prospect Books. ISBN 978-0-907325-79-6.

afghan, cuisine, this, article, require, cleanup, meet, wikipedia, quality, standards, specific, problem, many, bullet, points, like, list, instead, sentences, paragraphs, also, needs, better, organization, between, staple, foods, drinks, needs, more, encyclop. This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia s quality standards The specific problem is Too many bullet points like a list instead of sentences and paragraphs Also needs better organization between Staple foods Drinks etc Needs more encyclopedic content instead of current catalog like format Please help improve this article if you can November 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Afghan cuisine Pashto افغان پخلی romanized Afghan Pakhlai Dari آشپزی افغانی romanized Ashpazi e Afghani is influenced to a certain extent by Persian Central Asian and Indian cuisines due to Afghanistan s close proximity and cultural ties 1 2 The cuisine is halal and mainly based on mutton beef poultry and fish with rice and Afghan bread Accompanying these are common vegetables and dairy products such as milk yogurt whey etc 3 and fresh and dried fruits such as apples apricots grapes bananas oranges plums pomegranates sweet melons raisin etc 4 The diet of most Afghans revolve around rice based dishes while various forms of naan is consumed with most meals 5 Tea is generally consumed daily in large quantities and is a major part of hospitality 6 The culinary specialties reflect the nation s ethnic and geographic diversity The national dish of Afghanistan is Kabuli palaw a rice dish cooked with raisins carrots nuts and lamb or beef 7 Contents 1 Background 2 Staple foods 2 1 Rice 2 2 Afghan bread 3 Major dishes 3 1 Steamed dumplings 3 2 Qormah 3 3 Kabob 3 4 Chicken 3 5 Quroot 3 6 Miscellaneous 4 Desserts and snacks 5 Soups 6 Drinks 6 1 Chai 6 2 Doogh 7 Eating habits 8 Sub cuisines 8 1 Pashtun cuisine 8 2 Hazara cuisine 9 Dining etiquette 10 Special occasions 11 See also 12 References 13 Further readingBackground Edit Location of Afghanistan in Asia The cuisine of Afghanistan is halal and has elements from various places for example garam masala from India coriander and mint from Iran dumplings and noodles from Uzbekistan and Xinjiang in China and Baklava from Turkey 8 9 The similarities can be seen in the use of spices like cumin and cinnamon as in Indian cuisine green cardamom flavors as in Chinese tea and kebabs and yoghurts as in Turkish and Arabic cuisines 10 Staple foods EditRice Edit Afghan Qabeli palaw Rice with kofta meatballs and corn Rice is a core staple food in Afghan cuisine and the most important part of any meal 9 Biryani is one of the lesser popular rice dishes in Afghanistan It is consumed mostly in cities closer to neighboring Pakistan such as Kandahar Jalalabad and Khost Challow or white rice cooked with mild spices 11 is served mainly with qormas korma stews or casseroles Palaw is cooked similarly to challow but a combination of meat stock qorma and herbs are also mixed in before baking resulting in the elaborate colors flavors and aromas from which the rice got its name Sometimes caramelized sugar is used to give the rice a rich brown color Examples of palaw include Kabuli palaw the national dish 7 meat and stock are added plus a topping of fried raisins slivered carrots and pistachios Yakhni palaw meat and stock are added to give the rice a brown color Zamarod palaw spinach qorma is mixed in before the baking process hence zamarod meaning emerald Bore palaw lawand is added giving the rice a yellow color Landi palaw a traditional meal of rice with stock made from chicken or mutton that has been salted and dried in the sun Bonjan e roomi palaw bonjan e roomi tomato qorma is added during baking giving the rice a red color Serkah palaw similar to yakhni pulao but with vinegar and other spices Shibet palaw fresh dill and raisins are added during baking Narenj palaw a sweet elaborate rice dish made with saffron orange peel pistachios almonds and chicken Maash palaw a strictly vegetarian sweet and sour pilaf baked with mung beans apricots and bulgur wheat Alou balou palaw a sweet rice dish with plums and chickenAfghan bread Edit This section is in list format but may read better as prose You can help by converting this section if appropriate Editing help is available February 2022 Naan bread from a local baker the most widely consumed bread in Afghanistan Afghan bread is flat and cooked in a tanoor or tandoor a vertical ground clay oven The bread is slapped onto a stone wall to cook Tabakhai is a flatbread cooked on a flat upside down pan Major dishes EditSteamed dumplings Edit Mantu in a steamer before cooking Afghan aushak There is a wide variety of dumplings Known under the name khameerbob and often eaten as dumplings these native dishes are popular Due to the long time required to make the dough for the dumplings they are rarely served at large gatherings such as weddings They are instead served on special occasions at home citation needed Aushak dumplings filled with a mixture consisting mainly of leeks topped with either garlic mint qoroot or a garlic yogurt sauce sauteed tomatoes red kidney beans and a well seasoned ground meat mixture It is a dish associated with Kabul the capital of Afghanistan Mantu steamed dumplings filled with onion and ground beef or lamb usually topped with a tomato and yogurt or qoroot based sauce and then garnished with dried mint and coriander The yogurt based topping is usually a mixture of yogurt garlic and split chickpeas The qoroot based sauce is made of goat s cheese and also mixed with garlic a qoroot and yogurt mixture will sometimes be used Qormah Edit This section is in list format but may read better as prose You can help by converting this section if appropriate Editing help is available February 2022 Qormah also spelled korma or qorma is an onion and tomato based stew or casserole usually served with challow rice 3 First onion is caramelized for a richly colored stew Then tomato is added along with a variety of fruits spices and vegetables depending on the recipe The main ingredient which can be meat or other vegetables is added last There are hundreds of different types of qormahs including Qormah e gosht meat qormah usually the main qormah served with palaw at gatherings Qormah e alou bokhara wa dalnakhod onion based using veal or chicken sour plums lentils and cardamom Qormah e nadroo onion based using lamb meat or veal yogurt lotus roots cilantro and coriander Qormah e lawand onion based using chicken lamb or beef plus yogurt turmeric and cilantro Qormah e sabzi lamb sauteed spinach and other greens Qormah e shalgham onion based using lamb turnips and sugar sweet and sour taste Kabob Edit Kofta Kabob with naan Afghan kabob is most often found in restaurants and at outdoor street vendor stalls Most of the time it contains lamb meat Kabob is made with naan instead of rice Customers have the option to sprinkle sumac or ghora dried ground sour grapes on their kabob Pieces of fat from the sheep s tail jijeq are usually added to the skewers to add extra flavor Chopan kabob being prepared Other popular kabobs include the lamb chop ribs kofta ground beef and chicken Chapli kebab a specialty of eastern Afghanistan is a patty of minced beef It is a popular barbecue meal in both Pakistan and Afghanistan It is prepared flat and round and served with naan The original recipe of chapli kabob dictates a half meat half flour mixture which renders it lighter in taste and less expensive Chicken Edit Afghan chicken or murgh e Afghan is a classic example of one of the most famous dishes of Afghanistan Chicken dishes are usually found in restaurants and at outdoor street vendor stalls Unlike in the Indian cooking style chicken in Afghan cuisine is often used with the intention that it be halal Cream butter and curd are customary ingredients in all chicken recipes whether served as an appetizer or a main course Quroot Edit Quroot or qoroot is a reconstituted dairy product traditionally a by product of butter made from sheep s or goat s milk The residual buttermilk remaining after churning butter is soured further by keeping it at room temperature for a few days treated with salt and then eventually boiled The precipitated casein is filtered through cheesecloth pressed in order to remove liquid and then shaped into balls the product is thus a hard and very sour cottage cheese Though it can be eaten raw as a savory snack it is typically served with cooked Afghan dishes such as aushak mantu and kichri qoroot Miscellaneous Edit This section is in list format but may read better as prose You can help by converting this section if appropriate Editing help is available February 2022 A table setting of Afghan food in Kabul Badenjan eggplant is usually served for lunch as a light meal or as a side dish It tastes best with freshly baked bread along with sour minted yogurt Shomleh shlombeh a cold drink made of yogurt that is sprinkled with fresh or dried mint Afghan men eating at a lunchtime feast in Kunar Weleyat Afghan burger Afghan Chatni 12 made with fresh coriander leaves Afghan Kofta meatballs 13 Afghan salad Aush hand made noodles Baamiyah or Bhindi cooked okra Badenjan cooked eggplant with potatoes and tomatoes Badenjan Burani fried slices of eggplant topped with a garlic sour cream sauce and sprinkled with dried mint Badenjan Salad eggplant salad with garlic Bichak small turnovers with various fillings including potato and herbs or ground meat Bolani also called Buregian in southern Afghanistan somewhat similar to a Quesadilla Chakida or chakka type of sour cream Chopan Pashto Persian چوپان meaning shepherd kabob Pashto Persian کباب lamb chops skewered and grilled on charcoal Dampukht steamed rice Delda or Oagra mainly a Southern dish whose main ingredient is a mixture of split wheat and a variety of beans Dolma stuffed grape leaves Gosh e feel thin fried pastries covered in powdered sugar and ground pistachios Halwaua e Aurd e Sujee Kaddo Borwani sweet pumpkins 1 Kalah Chuquki or Kalah Gunjeshk battered deep fried bird heads Kalah Pacha lamb or beef head feet cooked in a broth served in bowls as a soup dish or in a stew or curry Kebab similar to Middle Eastern and Central Asian style Khoujoor 14 Afghan pastry deep fried oval shaped similar to doughnuts in taste Kichri sticky medium grain rice cooked with mung beans and onions Londi or gusht e qaaq spiced jerky Maast or labanyat type of plain yogurt Maushawa mixed beans and tiny meatballs served in a bowl Moraba fruit preserves sugar syrup and fruits apple sour cherry or various berries or made with dried fruits Afghan favorite is the Alu Bakhara Nargis kabob egg based angel hair pasta soaked in sugar syrup wrapped around a piece of meat Narenge Palau dried sweet orange peel and green raisins with a variety of nuts mixed with yellow rice glazed with light sugar syrup Osh Pyozee stuffed onion Owmach made from flour a soup like dish very thick and pasty Salata tomato and onion based salad often incorporating cucumber Rosh cooked lamb and mutton with no spices 15 Shami kabob cooked beef blended with spices flour and eggs and rolled into hot dog shapes or flat round shapes and fried Shola Ghorbandi Shor Nakhood chickpeas with special toppings Torshi eggplant and carrot mixed with other herbs and spices pickled in vinegar and aged Bolani Cooked okra is also served for lunch or as a side dish Afghan lamb kebab with yellow saffron rice Roasted chicken Samples of some native Afghan fruitsDesserts and snacks Edit Samples of Afghan fresh and dried fruits As a desert after a meal most Afghans generally eat fresh fruits such as apples apricots bananas grapes mangoes melons oranges pears pomegranates etc For snacks they drink tea with something sweet like cakes cookies or pastries On some occasions they also eat dried fruits which are always widely available in every Afghan market Others may eat any of the following Afghan Cake similar to pound cake sometimes with real fruit or jelly inside Afghan Ice Cream Baklava pastry Cream roll pastry Falooda or Faloodeh Firini 16 Fernea sometimes spelled feereny milk and cornstarch help make this very sweet similar to rice pudding without the rice Kolcha variety of cookies baked in clay ovens with charcoal Sheer Yakh a traditional wet ice cream Sheer khurma a traditional dessert Sheer Berinj rice pudding Soups EditThis section is in list format but may read better as prose You can help by converting this section if appropriate Editing help is available February 2022 Shorba Afghan soup similar to borscht Shorwa E Tarkari 17 meat and vegetable soup Peyawa or Eshkana a soup based on flour very similar to a gravy but mixed with chopped onion potatoes and eggs Aushe Sarka vinegar based flat noodle soup tastes very similar to Chinese hot and sour soup Drinks EditChai Edit Village elders and US special forces drinking Afghan green tea in 2007 Chai is tea in Afghanistan which can either be green or black It is consumed at all times especially a short time after finishing a meal or with guests during any social gathering Most people drink green tea with no sugar Some add cardamom saffron or sugar Sheer chai which translates from milk tea is also consumed but mostly in the morning and on special occasions It is a type of Kashmiri chai Many people of Afghanistan also drink masala chai particularly in cities such as Asadabad Jalalabad Khost and Kandahar Doogh Edit Doogh also known by some Afghans as shomleh or shlombeh is a cold drink made by mixing water with yogurt and then adding fresh or dried mint Some variations of doogh include the addition of crushed or diced cucumber chunks It is the second most widely consumed drink in Afghanistan the first being tea especially during lunchtime in summer Doogh can be found at almost every Afghan grocery store and is served in restaurants Eating habits EditThis section is empty You can help by adding to it November 2021 Sub cuisines EditWhile Afghans have a common cuisine certain ethnicities form sub variations of it Pashtun cuisine Edit Main article Pashtun cuisine Pashtuns are the largest ethnic group of Afghanistan constituting about 42 of the country s total population 18 A major dish in Pashtun culture are Rosh cooked lamb and mutton with no spices 15 and Sohbat found at traditional gatherings and events 19 20 Other major Pashtun dishes include lamb skewered sajji and chapli kebab The name dampukht stands for steamed meat and Khaddi kebab is the Afghan shashlik which is grilled on an open fire on a spit 21 Although it differs from region to region Pashtun cuisine is meat heavy and often includes caramelized rice For example the dish known as bolani in the north and east is often called borogyen in the south and west of Afghanistan Common summer beverages include shlombeh also known in Persian as doogh a drink consisting of liquid yogurt mint and bedreng Afghan cucumber Sherbet is an ice sugared cold drink Sheer yakh is a sweet ice like product literally translating to cold milk 21 Hazara cuisine Edit Main article Hazaragi cuisine The Hazara people in central Afghanistan in the region of Hazarajat and western Pakistan Balochistan province have their own fare The Hazaragi cuisine shares some similarities with neighboring regional cuisines so it is mainly influenced by Central Asian Persian and South Asian cooking However cooking methods vary in some of the dishes of these neighboring cuisines Dining etiquette EditTraditionally dinners are held on a tablecloth on the floor which is called the dastarkhan Meals are normally eaten with the right hand After a meal tea with dessert is served 9 Special occasions EditServing tea and white sugared almonds called nuql is customary during Afghan festivals 3 22 See also Edit Food portalCulture of Afghanistan Economy of AfghanistanPortals Society Food AfghanistanReferences Edit a b Exile on Charles Street Restaurateur Qayum Karzai s life is split between Baltimore and his native Afghanistan Baynard Woods The Baltimore Sun 3 March 2015 Retrieved 2021 12 27 About Afghan food SBS 31 March 2021 Retrieved 13 November 2021 a b c Brittin Helen 2011 The Food and Culture Around the World Handbook Boston Prentice Hall pp 20 21 ISBN 9780135074817 Rare Heirloom Seeds Baker Creek Heirloom Seeds Baker Creek Heirloom Seeds Archived from the original on 2016 03 04 Retrieved 2013 10 28 What to eat and drink in Afghanistan Sheer Chai Afghan Cardamom Tea with milk July 2020 a b Ali Tanveer 31 July 2012 Everything You Need To Know About Afghan Food foodrepublic Retrieved 2014 02 19 What do Afghan families like to eat for three meals a day Why is it the healthiest country in the world iNews 15 December 2022 Retrieved 15 December 2022 a b c Linda McElroy Customs and Cuisine of Afghanistan Venkatraman Vijaysree 6 December 2006 Discovering Afghan Cuisine a World Away NPR Afghan Cuisine Challow Afghanistan Online 2018 04 09 Retrieved 2021 10 18 Afghan Chatni made with fresh cilantro leaves WATAN CHAT March 12 2017 Dea Cynthia March 9 2015 Where to Find the Best Meatballs in Los Angeles KCET Retrieved 2022 12 30 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Chef This Khajoor Afghan Kitchen Recipes a b آغا جان ماما مشهوره روش کندهار Popular Rosh Kandahar on YouTube Firni Recipe Easy Dessert Recipe Afghani Cuisine Firni Phirni Easy Sweet Dish Recipe فرنی افغانی on YouTube Chef This Shorwa E Tarkari Meat amp Veg Soup Afghan Kitchen Recipes The Ethnic Groups Of Afghanistan WorldAtlas 10 September 2019 Sohbat The Pashtun Dish That Brings People Together www gounesco com 5 August 2016 ayesha ibrahim 2016 08 05 Sohbat The Pashtun Dish That Brings People Together Make Heritage Fun Retrieved 2021 08 18 a b Safia Haleem 1 May 2013 Pakistan Culture Smart The Essential Guide to Customs amp Culture Kuperard pp 98 ISBN 978 1 85733 678 8 Afghan Cookbook afghancookbook tumblr com Further reading EditHelen J Saberi 1997 Travel and Food in Afghanistan In Harlan Walker ed Food on the Move Proceedings of the Oxford Symposium on Food and Cookery 1996 Prospect Books ISBN 978 0 907325 79 6 Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cuisine of Afghanistan Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Afghan cuisine amp oldid 1143162616 Quroot, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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