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Lubia polow: Rice with green beans and minced meat. Albalu polow: Rice with sour cherries and slices of chicken or red meat. Morasa polow: Rice "jewelled" with barberries, pistachios, raisins, carrots, orange peel, and almonds. [15] [16] Shirin polow: Rice with sweet carrots, raisins, and almonds. [17] Adas polow: Rice with lentils, raisins ...
Example of dish showing golden crusted rice . Kateh (Persian: کته) is an Iranian rice dish [1] from the Caspian region of Iran. [2] [3] Unlike Polo/Cholo, kateh is sticky and does not have tahdig (the rice, bread or potato crust at the bottom), though it does form a crust on the bottom where the salt and oil collect. [4]
Baghalaa polow (Persian: باقلا پلو); is an Iranian dish of rice, fava beans and dill. In Persian, baghalaa means fava bean while polo is pilaf, a style of cooked rice. It is made by cooking rice and green broad beans in boiling water. When cooked, the rice and beans are layered with dill in a pan, and everything is baked in an oven ...
Chelow kabab (Persian: چلوکباب čelow-kabāb [tʃelowkæˈbɒːb]) is an Iranian dish consisting of steamed rice (čelow) and one of the many varieties of Iranian kebab. [1] It is considered the national dish of Iran, [2] [3] and was probably created by the time of the Qajar dynasty. [1]
Fesenjān (Persian: فسنجان; also called fesenjoon in Tehrani dialect) is a sweet and sour Iranian stew (a khoresh). The roots of this Persian delicacy trace back to the Sassanid dynasty's golden age. [1] It is typically served over rice in the Iranian manner. [2] In Iran, it is made with minced meat (lamb, sheep or beef), meatballs ...
Chelow kabab is considered to be the national dish of Iran. [1]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.
Loobia polo (Persian: لوبیا پلو) is an Iranian dish of rice, green beans, and beef or lamb. In the Persian language , loobia means bean while polo is a style of cooked rice, known in English as pilaf .
Keshmesh polo (raisins in rice) – found all over Iran now, but originated in northern Iran. Khoresh-e gol dar chaman (broad bean stew) – a stew made of garlic, dill, lamb and broad beans. [17] An alternative to using broad beans in this recipe are fava beans. [18] Khoresh-e torsh tareh (stew of herbs, garlic, eggs). [18]