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Roasted flour mixed with butter or olive oil, sugar or honey, cinnamon, almonds (or sometimes peanuts), and other ingredients [1] Sfenj: Dessert A doughnut sprinkled with sugar or soaked in honey. Qrashel: Dessert traditional sweet sesame rolls, made with anise and fennel and sprinkled with sesame, made in Morocco at least since the 16th ...
Spices and ras el hanout are used extensively in Moroccan food. [ 11 ] [ 12 ] [ 13 ] Although some spices have been imported to Morocco through the Arabs , introducing Persian and Arabic cooking influences, many ingredients—like saffron from Talaouine, mint and olives from Meknes , and oranges and lemons from Fes —are home-grown, and are ...
Algeria and Morocco: A traditional Algerian and Moroccan soup of Maghreb. Hawawshi: Egypt: A traditional Egyptian food very similar to the Middle eastern pizza-like Lahmacun. It is meat minced and spiced with onions and pepper, parsley and sometimes hot peppers and chilies, placed between two circular layers of dough, then baked in the oven ...
In Maghrebi cuisine, the most common staple foods are wheat (for khobz bread [7] and couscous [8]), [9] fish, seafood, goat, [10] lamb, [10] beef, [10] dates, almonds, olives and various vegetables and fruits. Because the region is predominantly Muslim, halal meats are usually eaten. Most dishes are spiced. [11]
Veggie Fajitas. Fajitas typically feature peppers and onions, but this veggie version adds mushrooms, yellow squash, and zucchini to the mix for a filling dinner idea.
Arab cuisine uses specific and unique foods and spices. Some of those foods are: Meat—lamb and chicken are the most used, followed by beef and goat. Other poultry is used in some regions, and fish is used in coastal areas including the Mediterranean Sea, Atlantic Ocean and the Red Sea. Some Christian Arabs eat pork. [10]
In winter, the slow cooker serves up a heaping ladleful of all your favorite winter stews and soups—the warming, stick-to-your-ribs food that makes winter so great.
Morocco: Tripe wrapped around sticks and cooked over hot coals Akara, or koose Nigeria, Benin, Ghana and Sierra Leone A Yoruba food made from peeled beans made into balls and deep-fried, known as Koose in Hausa and Ghana, can be eaten as a snack, but is often coupled with hausa koko as part of a breakfast meal. Alloco (Nigeria: dodo)