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Sheikh al-mahshi (شيخ المحشي Arabic pronunciation: [ʃeːx.al.maħʃi] 'the Chief of fillings'), sheikh el mahshi or shexmahshi (Kurdish) is a popular dish in the Middle East consisting of zucchini stuffed with minced lamb meat and nuts, bathed in a yogurt sauce (the original) or tomato sauce (derivative).
Stuffed squash, courgette, marrow, mahshi, or zucchini is a dish common in Egypt, the Balkans and the Ottoman cuisine, a kind of dolma. It consists of various kinds of squash or zucchini stuffed with rice and sometimes meat and cooked on the stovetop or in the oven. The meat version is served hot, as a main course.
Kousa mahshi consists of various kinds of squash or zucchini stuffed with rice and sometimes meat and cooked on the stovetop or in the oven. [ 79 ] Chickpea-based dishes
Kousa mahshi (كوسا محشي)—courgettes baked and stuffed with minced meat and rice in a tomato-based sauce; Malfouf (ملفوف)–rolled cabbage leaves stuffed with rice, meat and spices [9] Jordanian lamb mansaf. Mansaf (منسف)—lamb or chicken cooked in a sauce of fermented dried yogurt and served over rice
Maqluba—an "upside-down" dish, made with fried vegetables, meat (lamb), rice and eggplant; Musakhan—large taboon bread topped with sumac, and onions; Ruz wa Lahme ma' Laban—mix of rice and lamb topped with a mildly spicy yogurt [1] Shish barak —chicken pieces on skewers
A group of rice- or meat-and-herb filled vegetable dishes of Ottoman origin. Variations are eaten across the Levant, the eastern Mediterranean and the Arab world. Can be served warm or cold. Similar to the Greek stuffed grape leaves, dolmadakia or sarma. Duqqa: Egypt: A dip or seasoning of herbs, oil and spices. Falafel: Middle East
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 ...
A few minutes later, the water or chicken broth is added, at a ratio of 1:1, that is, the same liquid as rice. It is covered and when the water starts to boil, the heat is lowered. Depending on the altitude ( amsl ), the cooking time will vary between 15 and 30 minutes.