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Sahawiq (Yemeni Arabic: سَحاوِق, IPA: [saħaːwiq] [1]), zhoug or zhug (from Judeo-Yemenite Arabic سحوق or זחוק IPA: [zħuːq] through Hebrew: סְחוּג, romanized: skhug), [2] is a hot sauce originating in Yemeni cuisine. In other countries of the Arabian Peninsula it is also called mabooj (Arabic: معبوج), and bisbaas. [3]
Fresh tomatoes, kosher salt, black pepper, !occasionally olive oil, garlic, [3] parsley, cilantro, zhoug Resek agvaniyot , or resek ( Hebrew : רסק עגבניות or רסק , lit. 'tomato puree'), is an Israeli condiment made of grated tomatoes that is traditionally served with malawach , [ 3 ] jachnun , bourekas , kubaneh , [ 4 ] and other ...
It's not like spaghetti sauce vs. ketchup. It's like "ketchup" vs "catsup". Different people have different recipes and different names, but in the end, it's the same basic sauce. There are maybe a dozen mass-produced variations on the ketchup recipe in the US...should each have its own article? DonIncognito 02:28, 11 July 2006 (UTC)
Harissa sauce has that hot chili pepper taste that's a signature of Tunisian cuisine. It's made by blending dried hot chilies, caraway seeds, smoked paprika, salt, garlic, lemon juice and vinegar ...
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Malawach dough that has been rolled in out, spread with butter and formed into a coil. Malawach was traditionally prepared at home by the women in the Yemenite Jewish community, and is made out of a laminated dough similar to puff pastry that has been enriched with either butter, Clarified butter, or margarine if pareve; creating a very flaky consistency with many layers, similar to a croissant.
Location of Yemen. Yemeni cuisine is distinct from the wider Middle Eastern cuisines with regional variation. Although some foreign influences are evident in some regions of the country (with Ottoman influences showing in Sanaa, while Indian influence is evident in the southern areas around Aden and Mukalla), the Yemeni kitchen is based on similar foundations across the country.
Tahina with lemon and garlic, a staple of Mizrahi Jewish cuisine as a dip or cooking sauce. Mizrahi Jews are the Jews of the Middle East, and points south and east, largely along the Mediterranean coastal areas and the Levant. In some countries, there was much mixing of populations after 1492 when the Jews were expelled from Spain.