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A couscoussier (Arabic: كسكاس, romanized: kiskās) is a traditional double-chambered food steamer used in North African and Berber cuisine (particularly, the cuisines of Libya, Tunisia, Algeria and Morocco) to cook couscous. [1] This container is composed of: from a lower part, the pot, usually containing water, vegetables, red or white meats.
Traces of cooking vessels similar to couscoussiers have been discovered in graves dating back to the 3rd century BC, which belonged to the Berber kings of Numidia. These archaeological findings were unearthed in Tiaret and Kabylia, Algeria. [9] [10] The Cirta Museum in Constantine, Algeria, preserves these historical utensils. [11]
In case one wonders why France is the exception: it's been known there since the 16th century, France was fully exposed to it when Algeria became part of France, it's widely consumed there (not just by the Maghrebis and the Pied-Noir), the word Couscoussier is French and so is the word Couscous, etc. M.Bitton 13:58, 5 January 2022 (UTC)
Elle a pris son téléphone – un Android à la batterie fatiguée – et appelé Cathy Wali, l’une des militantes de Mount Hagen. “Cathy, va tout de suite au commissariat. Vois ce que tu peux apprendre des gens du coin, mais sois prudente! Tu ne sais pas qui a participé (…) Non, non, fais juste un peu de tok tok avec les gens du coin.
Juan Soto was officially introduced as a member of the New York Mets during a news conference Thursday at Citi Field after signing a record-shattering, 15-year, $765 million free-agent contract ...
It is similarly served alongside a chicken and chickpea broth. "Maftoul" is an Arabic word derived from the root "fa-ta-la," which means to roll or to twist, describing the hand-rolling method used to make the granules. [29] Wusu-Wusu is a couscous that is prepared out of fonio in the Hausa region of Nigeria, Benin, Togo and Ghana. [43]
The iPhone is a line of smartphones developed and marketed by Apple that run iOS, the company's own mobile operating system.The first-generation iPhone was announced by then–Apple CEO Steve Jobs on January 9, 2007, at Macworld 2007, and launched later that year.
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