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Dolma

Dolma (Turkish for "stuffed") is a family of stuffed dishes associated with Turkish or Ottoman cuisine, typically made with a filling of rice, minced meat, offal, seafood, fruit, or any combination of these inside a vegetable or a leaf wrapping. Wrapped dolma, specifically, are known as sarma, made by rolling grape, cabbage, or other leaves around the filling. Dolma can be served warm or at room temperature and are common in modern cuisines of regions and nations that once were part of the Ottoman Empire.[2]

Dolma
Whole stuffed pepper and tomato dolma
CourseAppetizer or main dish
Region or stateEastern Mediterranean, Balkans,[1] Levant, Anatolia or Turkey, South Caucasus, Iraq, Iran, Central Asia, Algeria, Egypt, Libya.
Serving temperatureHot or room temperature
Main ingredientsVaries
Variationsvegetables, seafood, fruit, offal
  • Cookbook: Dolma
  •   Media: Dolma
Dolma making and sharing tradition, a marker of cultural identity
CountryAzerbaijan
Reference01188
RegionEurope and North America
Inscription history
Inscription2017 (12th session)
ListRepresentative

History

Stuffed vegetable dishes have been a part of West Asian Cuisine[3] for centuries.[4][better source needed] Recipes for stuffed eggplant have been found in Medieval Arabic cookbooks and, in Ancient Greek cuisine, fig leaves stuffed with sweetened cheese were called thrion.[5] The word dolma, of Turkish origin, means "something stuffed" or "filled".[6][7] (A Turkish share taxi is called a dolmuş for similar reasons). In some of the former Ottoman countries, native names have been retained or have blended with Turkish language terms, for example, in the Arab states of the Persian Gulf and Damascus, stuffed leaves are called mahshi yabraq or mahshi brag, a combination of the Turkish word for leaf (yaprak) and the Arabic term for stuffed (mahshi).[8]

Several dolma recipes were recorded in 19th-century Iran by Naser al-Din Shah Qajar's chef, including stuffed vine leaves, cabbage leaves, cucumbers, eggplants, apples, and quinces, with varied fillings prepared with ground meat, sauteed mint leaves, rice and saffron.[9] Iraqi Jewish families have a version of dolma with sweet and sour flavors that were not found in other versions.[10] Dolma are part of cuisine of the Sephardic Jews as well.[11] Jews in the Ottoman Empire used locally grown grape leaves and adopted the Turkish name of the dish.[12]

During winter months cabbage was a staple food for peasants in Persia and the Ottoman Empire, and it spread to the Balkans as well. Jews in Eastern Europe prepared variations of stuffed cabbage rolls with kosher meat—this dish is called holishkes. As meat was expensive, rice was sometimes mixed in with the meat. Jews in Europe would sometimes substitute barley, bread or kasha (barley porridge) for the rice.[12] There are similar Slavic cabbage rolls: golubtsy in Russian, holubtsi in Ukrainian, gołąbki in Polish.

In the Persian Gulf, basmati rice is preferred, and the flavor of the stuffing may be enhanced using tomatoes, onions and cumin.[4] Cabbage rolls entered Swedish cuisine (where they are known as kåldolmar) after Charles XII, defeated by the Russians at the battle of Poltava, returned to Sweden in 1715 with his Turkish creditors and their cooks.[5]

Distribution

Dolma dishes are found in Turkish, Balkan, Southern Caucasian, Levantine cuisine,[13] Palestinian, Mesopotamian, Persian, Israeli, Maghrebi[14][15] and Central Asian cuisine.[2]

In the cuisine of the Crimean Tatars, dolma refers to peppers stuffed with minced lamb or beef, rice, onion, salt, pepper. Carrots, greens, tomato paste, and spices can be added to the filling. When grape leaves are stuffed with the same filling, however, they are called sarma.[16]

In 2017, dolma making in Azerbaijan was included in the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage Lists.[17]

 
Stuffed green pepper and zucchini
 
Armenian dolma

Variants

There are many varieties of the zeytinyağlı (with olive oil) and sağyağlı (with clarified butter) dolmas. The zeytinyağlı dolmas are usually stuffed with rice and served cold with a garlic-yogurt sauce, but variations with meat based fillings are served warm, often with tahini or avgolemono sauce.[18][19]

Stuffed vine leaves

 
Stuffed vine leaves served with yogurt

The origins of stuffed vine leaves are unknown. They can be made with meat or grain fillings, and served with garlic yogurt, tarbiya or sweet and sour sauces made with pomegranate syrup and sour cherries. They are known as dolmeh in Iran, dolmades in Greece, koupepia in Cyprus, tolma in Armenia, yarpaq dolması in Azerbaijan[20] and yebra in Syria.[21][22] Egyptians call this main course mahshi (also spelled mashi or mashy),[23] but traditionally cabbage is used in the winter and vine leaves are used in the summer.[24] Stuffed vine leaves without any meat, called yalancı dolma in Turkish, are served at room temperature.

Cabbage rolls

In several countries, cabbage rolls are stuffed with beans and tart fruits. It is wrapped with cabbage leaves, and stuffed with red beans, garbanzo beans, lentils, cracked wheat, tomato paste, onion and many spices and flavorings. Cabbage rolls are called Pasuts tolma (պասուց տոլմա) (Lenten dolma) in Armenian where they are of seven different grains – chickpea, bean, lentil, cracked wheat, pea, rice and maize.[citation needed] Armenian cooks sometimes use rose hip syrup to flavor stuffed cabbage rolls.[25] Cabbage rolls also known as kalam dolmasi in Azerbaijan[26]

Vegetables

Mülebbes dolma is a historic recipe from the Ottoman era.[27] Halep dolması—named for Aleppo—is a dish of eggplants stuffed with a meat and rice filling that is flavored with spices and either sour plum flavoring syrup or lemon juice.[28][29] Şalgam dolma are stuffed Russian turnips.[30][31]

 
Soğan dolması or stuffed onion

Soğan dolması ("soğan" meaning "onion" in Turkish), or stuffed onions, are a traditional dish in Bosnia, considered the specialty of Mostar. Ingredients include onions, minced beef, rice, oil, tomato purée, paprika, vinegar or sour cream, strained yogurt (locally known as kiselo mlijeko, literally "sour milk"), black pepper, salt and spices. After the onion's skin is removed, the larger, external, layers (leaves) of onion bulbs are used as containers, so-called "shirts" (Old Turk. "dolama(n)" for a special kind of Ottoman robe)[citation needed] for the meat stuffing. The remaining part of the onion is also used, mixed with the meat and fried on oil for a couple of minutes, to obtain the base of the stuffing. To extract the separate "shirts", the entire bulbs are cut on the top and then boiled until soft enough to be pried off, layer by layer. In order to prevent a further softening and crumbling, the bulbs should be blanched. The "shirts" are removed from the bulbs by slow and gentle finger pressure. Filled "shirts" ("dolme") are boiled slowly at low heat in broth. The level of liquid should be sufficient to cover the dolmas entirely. Sogan-dolma are usually served with dense natural yogurt.[citation needed]

Enginar dolması is stuffed whole artichoke hearts. They may be stuffed with seasoned rice[32] or ground meat cooked in fresh tomato sauce with aleppo pepper.[33] Celery root may be substituted for the artichoke.[34]

A regional specialty from Mardin is a mixed dolma platter. The sumac and Urfa pepper seasoned rice filling is first wrapped with onion layers, vine leaves, and cabbage. The remainder of the rice is used to fill eggplant, zucchini, and stuffing peppers. The wrapped onion dolma are added on the bottom of a deep cooking pot and the stuffed vegetables, cabbage rolls, and stuffed vine leaves are layered on top of the onion dolmas. The entire pot of dolmas are cooked in sumac flavored water.[35]

Seafood

There are also seafood variants of dolma. Stuffed mussels or Midye dolma may be filled with rice, onion, black pepper and pimento spice

The filling for kalamar dolma (stuffed calamari) is made from Halloumi cheese, onion, fresh bread crumbs, garlic and parsley. The whole tentacle is stuffed with the mixture and fried in a butter, olive oil and tomato sauce.[36] For another variation a whole small squid may be stuffed with a bulgur and fresh herb mixture and baked in the oven.[37]

Uskumru dolma (stuffed mackerel) is a staple of Istanbul cuisine. The version that was traditionally prepared by Armenian cooks is particularly well-regarded. After the fish is prepared by carefully separating the skin from the meat, the meat is sauteed with onions, currants, dried apricots, almonds, hazelnuts, pine nuts, walnuts, cinnamon, cloves, allspice, ginger, fresh herbs and lemon juice. The entire mixture is stuffed into the whole, intact skin. The stuffed mackerel is then either baked or preferably grilled long enough to brown the skin.[37][38]

Sardines (sardalya) may be stuffed with a filling of kashar cheese, tomato, onion, dill and parsley.[39] In Turkey, stuffed sardines may be served as a mezze platter at traditional taverns called meyhane.[40]

Offal

There are several varieties of dolma made with offal. Dalak dolması, widely considered a delicacy of Armenian origin, is spleen stuffed with rice that has been seasoned with allspice, salt, pepper, mint, parsley and onion. It may be served an accompaniment with anise-flavored liquor like arak, rakı, ouzo or oghi.[41][42]

Mumbar dolma is intestine stuffed with a moist mixture of ground meat, rice, pepper, cumin and salt. The stuffed intestine is then boiled in water until it is cooked thoroughly, after which it may be sliced and fried in butter before serving.[43]

Fruit-based dolmas

There are some fruit-based dolmas as well like şekerli ayva dolması (stuffed quinces with a rice and currant filling, flavored with coriander, cinnamon and sugar)[44] and pekmezli ayva dolması (meat and bulgur stuffed quince flavored with a traditional Turkish syrup, similar to molasses, called pekmez).[45] Pekmez is also an ingredient in the meat-based variants of elma dolması (stuffed apples) and sarı erık dolması (stuffed yellow plums).[46] Iranian Azerbaijanis and Persian Jews may serve stuffed quince, called dolma bay, as a Sabbath meal or during Sukkot.[47]

One filling for stuffed apples is made from a high-quality cubed lamb shoulder called kuşbaşı, ground lamb, and rice. First black grapes are boiled together with sumac—the resulting sumac flavored grape juice is drained and reserved. The kuşbaşı lamb is cooked in this sumac flavored grape juice. The apples are stuffed with a mixture of ground lamb combined with rice, salt, pepper and layered in a pot on top of the cooked chunks of kuşbaşı. The apples are cooked in the remaining sumac flavored grape juice. Dried apricots and blanched almonds are added to the pot near the end of the cooking process.[48] A meatless variant of the filling is made from a sauteed mixture of diced apples, diced pears, walnuts, hazelnut, currants, cinnamon, cloves, and star anise. The hollowed out apples are stuffed with the mixture and baked in the oven. This version may be garnished with powdered sugar.[49]

Stuffed melons were part of the Ottoman palace cuisine. The recipe survives in modern Yemenite and Armenian cooking.[50]

Religious celebrations and customs

It is customary for Jewish families to eat stuffed cabbage on Simchat Torah.[12]

Assyrians prepare meatless dolmas for Lent.[51] When traditional ingredients are not available, the Armenian Christian community in West Bengal, India celebrates Christmas with potoler dorma, a local variation from Anglo-Indian cuisine.[52] Stuffed vegetables called gemista or tsounidis are also common in Greek cuisine.[5]

Muslim families often serve dolma as part of the iftar meal during Ramadan and during the Eid al-Fitr celebrations that mark the end of the holy month. Large pots of dolma are prepared during the Novruz festival.[53]

See also

References

  1. ^ Labon, Joanna (1995). Balkan Blues: Writing Out of Yugoslavia. Northwestern University Press. ISBN 9780810113251.
  2. ^ a b Davidson, Alan. The Oxford Companion to Food. p. 258.
  3. ^ Paul David Buell, Eugene N. Anderson, Montserrat de Pablo Moya, Moldir Oskenbay (November 4, 2020). Crossroads of Cuisine: The Eurasian Heartland, the Silk Roads and Food. Brill. p. 251.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  4. ^ a b Salloum, Habeeb (2012-02-28). Arabian Nights Cookbook: From Lamb Kebabs to Baba Ghanouj, Delicious Homestyle Arabian Cooking. Tuttle Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4629-0524-9.
  5. ^ a b c Perry, Charles Perry (2014-11-20). "Dolma". The Oxford Companion to Food. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-967733-7. from the original on 2018-06-30. Retrieved 2018-06-29.
  6. ^ Ayto, John (2013). "Dolmades". The Diner's Dictionary. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-964024-9. from the original on 2018-06-30. Retrieved 2018-06-29.
  7. ^ "Dolma". Merriam Webster.
  8. ^ Davidson, Alan (1999). Oxford Companion to Food. p. 253.
  9. ^ Ghanoonparvar, M. R. (1995). "DOLMA". In Yarshater, Ehsan (ed.). Encyclopædia Iranica, Volume VII/5: Divorce IV–Drugs. London and New York: Routledge & Kegan Paul. pp. 478–479. ISBN 978-1-56859-023-3.
  10. ^ Meri, Josef (2016-06-23). The Routledge Handbook of Muslim-Jewish Relations. Routledge. p. 486. ISBN 978-1-317-38321-5.
  11. ^ Kittler, Pamela Goyan; Sucher, Kathryn P.; Nelms, Marcia (2011-08-22). Food and Culture. Cengage Learning. ISBN 978-0-538-73497-4.
  12. ^ a b c "The Jews, stuffed cabbage and Simchat Torah". Jewish Telegraphic Agency. 2012-10-07. from the original on 2017-11-10. Retrieved 2018-06-30.
  13. ^ Blüher, P. M. (1901). Encyclopédie de cuisine de tous les pays. University of California. p. 171.
  14. ^ Janes, Lauren; Bourguignon, Hélène (2014). "Curiosité gastronomique et cuisine exotique dans l'entre-deux-guerres: Une histoire de goût et de dégoût". Vingtième Siècle. Revue d'histoire (in French). 123 (3): 69. doi:10.3917/vin.123.0069. ISSN 0294-1759.
  15. ^ "Aubergines à l'algérienne". Le Pot-au-feu: 245. 1934.
  16. ^ Qırımtatar yemekleri: Cарма, retrieved 2023-07-19
  17. ^ Dolma making and sharing tradition, a marker of cultural identity 2017-12-07 at the Wayback Machine. UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage.
  18. ^ Kopka, Deborah (2011-09-01). Passport Series: Middle East. Milliken Publishing Company. ISBN 978-1-4291-2261-0.
  19. ^ Marks, Gil (2010-11-17). Encyclopedia of Jewish Food. HMH. ISBN 978-0-544-18631-6. from the original on 2016-08-10.
  20. ^ King, David C. (2006). Azerbaijan. Marshall Cavendish. ISBN 978-0-7614-2011-8.
  21. ^ Marks, Gil (2008-03-11). Olive Trees and Honey: A Treasury of Vegetarian Recipes from Jewish Communities Around the World. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. ISBN 978-0-544-18750-4.
  22. ^ Marks, Gil (2010-11-17). Encyclopedia of Jewish Food. HMH. ISBN 978-0-544-18631-6.
  23. ^ Hervé Beaumont (2008). Egypte (in French). Editions Marcus. pp. 36–. ISBN 978-2-7131-0269-1.
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  29. ^ Erdoğdu, Şeref (1999). Ankaram. T.C. Kültür Bakanlığı. ISBN 978-975-17-2180-8.
  30. ^ Turkish folk culture researches. Halk Kültürünü Araştırma Dairesi. 1990.
  31. ^ Zat, Vefa (2002). Eski İstanbul meyhaneleri. İletişim. ISBN 978-975-470-998-8.
  32. ^ "İzmir Usulü Enginar Dolması". Sabah. Retrieved 2018-06-29.
  33. ^ "Kıymalı enginar dolması tarifi". Mıllıyet Haber - Türkıye'nın Haber Sıtesı. from the original on 2018-06-29. Retrieved 2018-06-29.
  34. ^ "Kereviz Dolması tarifi (Bursa) - Haber - Mutfağım". Kanal D. 31 October 2012. from the original on 2018-06-30. Retrieved 2018-06-30.
  35. ^ "Zeytinyağlı Sumaklı Karışık Dolma tarifi - Haber - Mutfağım". Kanal D. 5 April 2013. from the original on 2018-06-30. Retrieved 2018-06-30.
  36. ^ Migros Türkiye. Kalamar Dolması Tarifi. Event occurs at 60 seconds. Retrieved 2018-06-29.
  37. ^ a b Basan, Ghillie (1997-04-15). Classic Turkish Cooking. Macmillan. p. 138. ISBN 978-0-312-15617-6.
  38. ^ YAŞİN, Mehmet (10 September 2017). "Uskumru mu kolyoz mu?". from the original on 2017-11-01. Retrieved 2018-06-29.
  39. ^ "Sardalya Dolma". Sabah. Retrieved 2018-06-30.
  40. ^ Zat, Erdir (2014). Türkiye Meyhaneler Rehberi: Türkiye Meyhaneler Rehberi. Overteam Yayınları. ISBN 978-605-5058-11-1.
  41. ^ Kesmez, Melisa; Aydın, Mehmet Said. Rakı Cep Ansiklopedisi: Rakı Cep Ansiklopedisi. Overteam Yayınları. ISBN 978-605-5058-00-5. from the original on 2018-06-30.
  42. ^ Zat, Erdir (2014). Türkiye Meyhaneler Rehberi: Türkiye Meyhaneler Rehberi. Overteam Yayınları. ISBN 978-605-5058-11-1.
  43. ^ Kaptan, Şükrü Tekin (1988). Denizli'nin halk kültürü ürünleri: bölgesel folklor karakterleri. Ş.T. Kaptan.
  44. ^ Üçer, Müjgân (2006). Anamın aşı tandırın başı: Sivas mutfağ̮ı : il merkezi ve ilçe yemekleri : gelenek, görenek, inançlar ve sözlü kültür. Kitabevi.
  45. ^ Toygar, Kâmil; Toygar, Nimet Berkok (2005). Ankara'da bağcılık ve bağ kültürü. Birlik Matbaacılık. ISBN 978-975-95216-5-3.
  46. ^ Jaine, Tom (1988). Taste: Proceedings of the Oxford Symposium on Food and Cookery. ISBN 9780907325390. Retrieved 2018-06-29.
  47. ^ Marks, Gil (1999-09-02). The: World of Jewish Cooking. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 978-0-684-83559-4.
  48. ^ "Terkib-i Tuffahiyye (Elma Dolması)". Sabah. from the original on 2018-06-30. Retrieved 2018-06-30.
  49. ^ "İçi Dolu Fıçıcık: Elma Dolması". Migros. from the original on 2018-06-30. Retrieved 2018-06-30.
  50. ^ Lovegren, Sylvia (15 April 2016). Melon: A Global History. ISBN 9781780236186.
  51. ^ Albala, Ken (2011). Food Cultures of the World Encyclopedia. ABC-CLIO. p. 255. ISBN 9781449618117.
  52. ^ "It's Christmas in January for Armenians - Times of India". The Times of India. 7 January 2017. Retrieved 2018-08-13.
  53. ^ Albala, Ken (2011). Food Cultures of the World Encyclopedia. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-0-313-37626-9.

Sources

  • Alan Davidson, The Oxford Companion to Food. ISBN 0-19-211579-0.
  • Gosetti Della Salda, Anna (1967). Le ricette regionali italiane (in Italian). Milano: Solares.
  •   Media related to Dolma at Wikimedia Commons

dolma, other, uses, disambiguation, turkish, stuffed, family, stuffed, dishes, associated, with, turkish, ottoman, cuisine, typically, made, with, filling, rice, minced, meat, offal, seafood, fruit, combination, these, inside, vegetable, leaf, wrapping, wrappe. For other uses see Dolma disambiguation Dolma Turkish for stuffed is a family of stuffed dishes associated with Turkish or Ottoman cuisine typically made with a filling of rice minced meat offal seafood fruit or any combination of these inside a vegetable or a leaf wrapping Wrapped dolma specifically are known as sarma made by rolling grape cabbage or other leaves around the filling Dolma can be served warm or at room temperature and are common in modern cuisines of regions and nations that once were part of the Ottoman Empire 2 DolmaWhole stuffed pepper and tomato dolmaCourseAppetizer or main dishRegion or stateEastern Mediterranean Balkans 1 Levant Anatolia or Turkey South Caucasus Iraq Iran Central Asia Algeria Egypt Libya Serving temperatureHot or room temperatureMain ingredientsVariesVariationsvegetables seafood fruit offalCookbook Dolma Media Dolma Dolma making and sharing tradition a marker of cultural identityUNESCO Intangible Cultural HeritageCountryAzerbaijanReference01188RegionEurope and North AmericaInscription historyInscription2017 12th session ListRepresentative Contents 1 History 2 Distribution 3 Variants 3 1 Stuffed vine leaves 3 2 Cabbage rolls 3 3 Vegetables 3 4 Seafood 3 5 Offal 3 6 Fruit based dolmas 4 Religious celebrations and customs 5 See also 6 References 7 SourcesHistoryStuffed vegetable dishes have been a part of West Asian Cuisine 3 for centuries 4 better source needed Recipes for stuffed eggplant have been found in Medieval Arabic cookbooks and in Ancient Greek cuisine fig leaves stuffed with sweetened cheese were called thrion 5 The word dolma of Turkish origin means something stuffed or filled 6 7 A Turkish share taxi is called a dolmus for similar reasons In some of the former Ottoman countries native names have been retained or have blended with Turkish language terms for example in the Arab states of the Persian Gulf and Damascus stuffed leaves are called mahshi yabraq or mahshi brag a combination of the Turkish word for leaf yaprak and the Arabic term for stuffed mahshi 8 Several dolma recipes were recorded in 19th century Iran by Naser al Din Shah Qajar s chef including stuffed vine leaves cabbage leaves cucumbers eggplants apples and quinces with varied fillings prepared with ground meat sauteed mint leaves rice and saffron 9 Iraqi Jewish families have a version of dolma with sweet and sour flavors that were not found in other versions 10 Dolma are part of cuisine of the Sephardic Jews as well 11 Jews in the Ottoman Empire used locally grown grape leaves and adopted the Turkish name of the dish 12 During winter months cabbage was a staple food for peasants in Persia and the Ottoman Empire and it spread to the Balkans as well Jews in Eastern Europe prepared variations of stuffed cabbage rolls with kosher meat this dish is called holishkes As meat was expensive rice was sometimes mixed in with the meat Jews in Europe would sometimes substitute barley bread or kasha barley porridge for the rice 12 There are similar Slavic cabbage rolls golubtsy in Russian holubtsi in Ukrainian golabki in Polish In the Persian Gulf basmati rice is preferred and the flavor of the stuffing may be enhanced using tomatoes onions and cumin 4 Cabbage rolls entered Swedish cuisine where they are known as kaldolmar after Charles XII defeated by the Russians at the battle of Poltava returned to Sweden in 1715 with his Turkish creditors and their cooks 5 DistributionDolma dishes are found in Turkish Balkan Southern Caucasian Levantine cuisine 13 Palestinian Mesopotamian Persian Israeli Maghrebi 14 15 and Central Asian cuisine 2 In the cuisine of the Crimean Tatars dolma refers to peppers stuffed with minced lamb or beef rice onion salt pepper Carrots greens tomato paste and spices can be added to the filling When grape leaves are stuffed with the same filling however they are called sarma 16 In 2017 dolma making in Azerbaijan was included in the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage Lists 17 nbsp Stuffed green pepper and zucchini nbsp Armenian dolmaVariantsThere are many varieties of the zeytinyagli with olive oil and sagyagli with clarified butter dolmas The zeytinyagli dolmas are usually stuffed with rice and served cold with a garlic yogurt sauce but variations with meat based fillings are served warm often with tahini or avgolemono sauce 18 19 Stuffed vine leaves Main article Sarma food nbsp Stuffed vine leaves served with yogurt The origins of stuffed vine leaves are unknown They can be made with meat or grain fillings and served with garlic yogurt tarbiya or sweet and sour sauces made with pomegranate syrup and sour cherries They are known as dolmeh in Iran dolmades in Greece koupepia in Cyprus tolma in Armenia yarpaq dolmasi in Azerbaijan 20 and yebra in Syria 21 22 Egyptians call this main course mahshi also spelled mashi or mashy 23 but traditionally cabbage is used in the winter and vine leaves are used in the summer 24 Stuffed vine leaves without any meat called yalanci dolma in Turkish are served at room temperature Cabbage rolls Main article Cabbage rolls In several countries cabbage rolls are stuffed with beans and tart fruits It is wrapped with cabbage leaves and stuffed with red beans garbanzo beans lentils cracked wheat tomato paste onion and many spices and flavorings Cabbage rolls are called Pasuts tolma պասուց տոլմա Lenten dolma in Armenian where they are of seven different grains chickpea bean lentil cracked wheat pea rice and maize citation needed Armenian cooks sometimes use rose hip syrup to flavor stuffed cabbage rolls 25 Cabbage rolls also known as kalam dolmasi in Azerbaijan 26 Vegetables Mulebbes dolma is a historic recipe from the Ottoman era 27 Halep dolmasi named for Aleppo is a dish of eggplants stuffed with a meat and rice filling that is flavored with spices and either sour plum flavoring syrup or lemon juice 28 29 Salgam dolma are stuffed Russian turnips 30 31 nbsp Sogan dolmasi or stuffed onion Sogan dolmasi sogan meaning onion in Turkish or stuffed onions are a traditional dish in Bosnia considered the specialty of Mostar Ingredients include onions minced beef rice oil tomato puree paprika vinegar or sour cream strained yogurt locally known as kiselo mlijeko literally sour milk black pepper salt and spices After the onion s skin is removed the larger external layers leaves of onion bulbs are used as containers so called shirts Old Turk dolama n for a special kind of Ottoman robe citation needed for the meat stuffing The remaining part of the onion is also used mixed with the meat and fried on oil for a couple of minutes to obtain the base of the stuffing To extract the separate shirts the entire bulbs are cut on the top and then boiled until soft enough to be pried off layer by layer In order to prevent a further softening and crumbling the bulbs should be blanched The shirts are removed from the bulbs by slow and gentle finger pressure Filled shirts dolme are boiled slowly at low heat in broth The level of liquid should be sufficient to cover the dolmas entirely Sogan dolma are usually served with dense natural yogurt citation needed Enginar dolmasi is stuffed whole artichoke hearts They may be stuffed with seasoned rice 32 or ground meat cooked in fresh tomato sauce with aleppo pepper 33 Celery root may be substituted for the artichoke 34 A regional specialty from Mardin is a mixed dolma platter The sumac and Urfa pepper seasoned rice filling is first wrapped with onion layers vine leaves and cabbage The remainder of the rice is used to fill eggplant zucchini and stuffing peppers The wrapped onion dolma are added on the bottom of a deep cooking pot and the stuffed vegetables cabbage rolls and stuffed vine leaves are layered on top of the onion dolmas The entire pot of dolmas are cooked in sumac flavored water 35 Seafood There are also seafood variants of dolma Stuffed mussels or Midye dolma may be filled with rice onion black pepper and pimento spiceThe filling for kalamar dolma stuffed calamari is made from Halloumi cheese onion fresh bread crumbs garlic and parsley The whole tentacle is stuffed with the mixture and fried in a butter olive oil and tomato sauce 36 For another variation a whole small squid may be stuffed with a bulgur and fresh herb mixture and baked in the oven 37 Uskumru dolma stuffed mackerel is a staple of Istanbul cuisine The version that was traditionally prepared by Armenian cooks is particularly well regarded After the fish is prepared by carefully separating the skin from the meat the meat is sauteed with onions currants dried apricots almonds hazelnuts pine nuts walnuts cinnamon cloves allspice ginger fresh herbs and lemon juice The entire mixture is stuffed into the whole intact skin The stuffed mackerel is then either baked or preferably grilled long enough to brown the skin 37 38 Sardines sardalya may be stuffed with a filling of kashar cheese tomato onion dill and parsley 39 In Turkey stuffed sardines may be served as a mezze platter at traditional taverns called meyhane 40 Offal There are several varieties of dolma made with offal Dalak dolmasi widely considered a delicacy of Armenian origin is spleen stuffed with rice that has been seasoned with allspice salt pepper mint parsley and onion It may be served an accompaniment with anise flavored liquor like arak raki ouzo or oghi 41 42 Mumbar dolma is intestine stuffed with a moist mixture of ground meat rice pepper cumin and salt The stuffed intestine is then boiled in water until it is cooked thoroughly after which it may be sliced and fried in butter before serving 43 Fruit based dolmas There are some fruit based dolmas as well like sekerli ayva dolmasi stuffed quinces with a rice and currant filling flavored with coriander cinnamon and sugar 44 and pekmezli ayva dolmasi meat and bulgur stuffed quince flavored with a traditional Turkish syrup similar to molasses called pekmez 45 Pekmez is also an ingredient in the meat based variants of elma dolmasi stuffed apples and sari erik dolmasi stuffed yellow plums 46 Iranian Azerbaijanis and Persian Jews may serve stuffed quince called dolma bay as a Sabbath meal or during Sukkot 47 One filling for stuffed apples is made from a high quality cubed lamb shoulder called kusbasi ground lamb and rice First black grapes are boiled together with sumac the resulting sumac flavored grape juice is drained and reserved The kusbasi lamb is cooked in this sumac flavored grape juice The apples are stuffed with a mixture of ground lamb combined with rice salt pepper and layered in a pot on top of the cooked chunks of kusbasi The apples are cooked in the remaining sumac flavored grape juice Dried apricots and blanched almonds are added to the pot near the end of the cooking process 48 A meatless variant of the filling is made from a sauteed mixture of diced apples diced pears walnuts hazelnut currants cinnamon cloves and star anise The hollowed out apples are stuffed with the mixture and baked in the oven This version may be garnished with powdered sugar 49 Stuffed melons were part of the Ottoman palace cuisine The recipe survives in modern Yemenite and Armenian cooking 50 Religious celebrations and customsIt is customary for Jewish families to eat stuffed cabbage on Simchat Torah 12 Assyrians prepare meatless dolmas for Lent 51 When traditional ingredients are not available the Armenian Christian community in West Bengal India celebrates Christmas with potoler dorma a local variation from Anglo Indian cuisine 52 Stuffed vegetables called gemista or tsounidis are also common in Greek cuisine 5 Muslim families often serve dolma as part of the iftar meal during Ramadan and during the Eid al Fitr celebrations that mark the end of the holy month Large pots of dolma are prepared during the Novruz festival 53 See alsoDolma Festival in Armenia List of stuffed dishes Sheikh al mahshi zucchini stuffed with minced lamb meat and pine nuts in yogurt sauceReferences Labon Joanna 1995 Balkan Blues Writing Out of Yugoslavia Northwestern University Press ISBN 9780810113251 a b Davidson Alan The Oxford Companion to Food p 258 Paul David Buell Eugene N Anderson Montserrat de Pablo Moya Moldir Oskenbay November 4 2020 Crossroads of Cuisine The Eurasian Heartland the Silk Roads and Food Brill p 251 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b Salloum Habeeb 2012 02 28 Arabian Nights Cookbook From Lamb Kebabs to Baba Ghanouj Delicious Homestyle Arabian Cooking Tuttle Publishing ISBN 978 1 4629 0524 9 a b c Perry Charles Perry 2014 11 20 Dolma The Oxford Companion to Food Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 967733 7 Archived from the original on 2018 06 30 Retrieved 2018 06 29 Ayto John 2013 Dolmades The Diner s Dictionary Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 964024 9 Archived from the original on 2018 06 30 Retrieved 2018 06 29 Dolma Merriam Webster Davidson Alan 1999 Oxford Companion to Food p 253 Ghanoonparvar M R 1995 DOLMA In Yarshater Ehsan ed Encyclopaedia Iranica Volume VII 5 Divorce IV Drugs London and New York Routledge amp Kegan Paul pp 478 479 ISBN 978 1 56859 023 3 Meri Josef 2016 06 23 The Routledge Handbook of Muslim Jewish Relations Routledge p 486 ISBN 978 1 317 38321 5 Kittler Pamela Goyan Sucher Kathryn P Nelms Marcia 2011 08 22 Food and Culture Cengage Learning ISBN 978 0 538 73497 4 a b c The Jews stuffed cabbage and Simchat Torah Jewish Telegraphic Agency 2012 10 07 Archived from the original on 2017 11 10 Retrieved 2018 06 30 Bluher P M 1901 Encyclopedie de cuisine de tous les pays University of California p 171 Janes Lauren Bourguignon Helene 2014 Curiosite gastronomique et cuisine exotique dans l entre deux guerres Une histoire de gout et de degout Vingtieme Siecle Revue d histoire in French 123 3 69 doi 10 3917 vin 123 0069 ISSN 0294 1759 Aubergines a l algerienne Le Pot au feu 245 1934 Qirimtatar yemekleri Carma retrieved 2023 07 19 Dolma making and sharing tradition a marker of cultural identity Archived 2017 12 07 at the Wayback Machine UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage Kopka Deborah 2011 09 01 Passport Series Middle East Milliken Publishing Company ISBN 978 1 4291 2261 0 Marks Gil 2010 11 17 Encyclopedia of Jewish Food HMH ISBN 978 0 544 18631 6 Archived from the original on 2016 08 10 King David C 2006 Azerbaijan Marshall Cavendish ISBN 978 0 7614 2011 8 Marks Gil 2008 03 11 Olive Trees and Honey A Treasury of Vegetarian Recipes from Jewish Communities Around the World Houghton Mifflin Harcourt ISBN 978 0 544 18750 4 Marks Gil 2010 11 17 Encyclopedia of Jewish Food HMH ISBN 978 0 544 18631 6 Herve Beaumont 2008 Egypte in French Editions Marcus pp 36 ISBN 978 2 7131 0269 1 Andrew Humphreys 1998 Cairo Lonely Planet p 156 ISBN 978 0 86442 548 5 Duguid Naomi 2016 09 06 Taste of Persia A Cook s Travels Through Armenia Azerbaijan Georgia Iran and Kurdistan Artisan Books ISBN 978 1 57965 727 7 King David C 2006 Azerbaijan Marshall Cavendish ISBN 978 0 7614 2011 8 Virgul Pusula Yayincilik 2007 Archived from the original on 2018 06 30 Vakfi Turkiye Ekonomik ve Toplumsal Tarih 1994 Dunden bugune Istanbul ansiklopedisi Kultur Bakanligi ISBN 978 975 7306 06 1 Erdogdu Seref 1999 Ankaram T C Kultur Bakanligi ISBN 978 975 17 2180 8 Turkish folk culture researches Halk Kulturunu Arastirma Dairesi 1990 Zat Vefa 2002 Eski Istanbul meyhaneleri Iletisim ISBN 978 975 470 998 8 Izmir Usulu Enginar Dolmasi Sabah Retrieved 2018 06 29 Kiymali enginar dolmasi tarifi Milliyet Haber Turkiye nin Haber Sitesi Archived from the original on 2018 06 29 Retrieved 2018 06 29 Kereviz Dolmasi tarifi Bursa Haber Mutfagim Kanal D 31 October 2012 Archived from the original on 2018 06 30 Retrieved 2018 06 30 Zeytinyagli Sumakli Karisik Dolma tarifi Haber Mutfagim Kanal D 5 April 2013 Archived from the original on 2018 06 30 Retrieved 2018 06 30 Migros Turkiye Kalamar Dolmasi Tarifi Event occurs at 60 seconds Retrieved 2018 06 29 a b Basan Ghillie 1997 04 15 Classic Turkish Cooking Macmillan p 138 ISBN 978 0 312 15617 6 YASIN Mehmet 10 September 2017 Uskumru mu kolyoz mu Archived from the original on 2017 11 01 Retrieved 2018 06 29 Sardalya Dolma Sabah Retrieved 2018 06 30 Zat Erdir 2014 Turkiye Meyhaneler Rehberi Turkiye Meyhaneler Rehberi Overteam Yayinlari ISBN 978 605 5058 11 1 Kesmez Melisa Aydin Mehmet Said Raki Cep Ansiklopedisi Raki Cep Ansiklopedisi Overteam Yayinlari ISBN 978 605 5058 00 5 Archived from the original on 2018 06 30 Zat Erdir 2014 Turkiye Meyhaneler Rehberi Turkiye Meyhaneler Rehberi Overteam Yayinlari ISBN 978 605 5058 11 1 Kaptan Sukru Tekin 1988 Denizli nin halk kulturu urunleri bolgesel folklor karakterleri S T Kaptan Ucer Mujgan 2006 Anamin asi tandirin basi Sivas mutfag i il merkezi ve ilce yemekleri gelenek gorenek inanclar ve sozlu kultur Kitabevi Toygar Kamil Toygar Nimet Berkok 2005 Ankara da bagcilik ve bag kulturu Birlik Matbaacilik ISBN 978 975 95216 5 3 Jaine Tom 1988 Taste Proceedings of the Oxford Symposium on Food and Cookery ISBN 9780907325390 Retrieved 2018 06 29 Marks Gil 1999 09 02 The World of Jewish Cooking Simon and Schuster ISBN 978 0 684 83559 4 Terkib i Tuffahiyye Elma Dolmasi Sabah Archived from the original on 2018 06 30 Retrieved 2018 06 30 Ici Dolu Ficicik Elma Dolmasi Migros Archived from the original on 2018 06 30 Retrieved 2018 06 30 Lovegren Sylvia 15 April 2016 Melon A Global History ISBN 9781780236186 Albala Ken 2011 Food Cultures of the World Encyclopedia ABC CLIO p 255 ISBN 9781449618117 It s Christmas in January for Armenians Times of India The Times of India 7 January 2017 Retrieved 2018 08 13 Albala Ken 2011 Food Cultures of the World Encyclopedia ABC CLIO ISBN 978 0 313 37626 9 SourcesAlan Davidson The Oxford Companion to Food ISBN 0 19 211579 0 Gosetti Della Salda Anna 1967 Le ricette regionali italiane in Italian Milano Solares nbsp Media related to Dolma at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dolma amp oldid 1213689110, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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