Iraqi cuisine
Iraqi cuisine or Mesopotamian cuisine has its origins from Sumerians, Akkadians, Babylonians, Assyrians, ancient Persians, Mesopotamian Arabs, and the other ethnic groups of the region. Tablets found in ancient ruins in Iraq show recipes prepared in the temples during religious festivals – the first cookbooks in the world. Ancient Iraq, or Mesopotamia, was home to a sophisticated and highly advanced civilization, in all fields of knowledge, including the culinary arts. However, it was in the Islamic Golden Age when Baghdad was the capital of the Abbasid Caliphate that the Iraqi kitchen reached its zenith. Today, the cuisine of Iraq reflects this rich inheritance as well as strong influences from the culinary traditions of neighbouring Iran, Turkey, and the Syria region area.
Meals begin with appetizers and salads – known as Mezza. Some dishes include Kebab, Gauss, Bamieh, Quzi, Falafel, Kubbah/Kibbeh, Masgûf, and Maqluba. Stuffed vegetable dishes such as Dolma and Mahshi are also popular.
Contemporary Iraq reflects the same natural division as ancient Mesopotamia, which consisted of Assyria in the arid northern uplands and Babylonia in the southern alluvial plain. Al-Jazira grows wheat and crops requiring winter chill such as apples and stone fruits. Al-Irāq grows rice and barley, citrus fruits, and is responsible for Iraq's position as the world's largest producer of dates.
History
Archaeologists have found evidence from excavations at Jarmo in northeastern Iraq, that pistachio nuts were a common food as early as 6750 BC.Among the ancient texts discovered in Iraq is a Sumerian-Akkadian bilingual dictionary, recorded in cuneiform script on 24 stone tablets about 1900 BC. It lists terms in the two ancient Iraqi languages for over 800 different items of food and drink. Included are 20 different kinds of cheese, over 100 varieties of soup and 300 types of bread – each with different ingredients, filling, shape or size.
The world's oldest recipes are found in Mesopotamia of modern-day ancient Iraq, written in cuneiform tablets. One of three excavated cuneiform clay tablets written in 1700 BC in Babylon, 50 miles south of present-day Baghdad, deals with 24 recipes for stew cooked with meat and vegetables, enhanced and seasoned with leeks, onion, garlic, and spices and herbs like cassia, cumin, coriander, mint, and dill. Stew has remained a mainstay in the cuisine. Extant medieval Iraqi recipes and modern Iraqi cuisine attest to this.
Iraqi cuisine
Ingredients
Some characteristic ingredients of Iraqi cuisine include:- Vegetables such as eggplant, tomato, turnips, beans, shallot, okra, onion, lentils, cress, potato, cabbage, courgette, spinach, lettuces, leeks, artichokes, garlic, peppers and chilli.
- Cereals such as rice, bulghur wheat and barley.
- Pulses and legumes such as lentils, chickpeas, green beans, green grams, and cannellini.
- Fruits such as olives, dates, raisins, apricots, plums, figs, grapes, melons, pomegranate, apples, cherries, quince, and citrus fruits; orange, lemon and lime.
- Cheeses such as baladi, feta and halloumi.
- Herbs and spices such as cinnamon, cardamom, coriander, fenugreek, cumin, oregano, mint, tarragon, thyme, saffron, dried lime, cassia, dill, turmeric, baharat, advieh, sumac and za'atar.
- Nuts and seeds such as sesame, pistachios, almonds, walnuts, hazelnuts and pine nuts.
Mêzzä
is a selection of appetizers or small dishes often served with beverage, like anise-flavored liqueurs such as arak, ouzo, raki or different wines, similar to the tapas of Spain or finger food.- Baytinijan maqli, a dish often served cold, consisting of fried aubergine with tahini sauce, lettuce, parsley and tomatoes, garnished with sumac and served on pita bread or sliced bread, often grilled or toasted. Variations include bell peppers, or a garlic lemon vinaigrette.
- Fattoush, a salad made from several garden vegetables and toasted or fried pieces of pita bread.
- Tabbouleh, a salad dish, often used as part of a mezze. Its primary ingredients are finely chopped parsley, bulgur, mint, tomato, scallion, and other herbs with lemon juice, olive oil and various seasonings, generally including black pepper and sometimes cinnamon and allspice.
- Turshi, pickled vegetables in the cuisine of many Balkan and Middle East countries. It is a traditional appetizer, meze for rakı, ouzo, tsipouro and rakia.
- Arab salad
Dips
- Baba ghanoush, a dish of baked aubergine mashed and mixed with various seasonings.
- Hummus, a dip or spread made from cooked, mashed chickpeas, blended with tahini, olive oil, lemon juice, salt and garlic.
- Muhammara, a hot pepper dip originally from Aleppo, Syria.
- Tzatziki, an appetizer of Ottoman cuisine origin, also used as a sauce for souvlaki and gyros. Tzatziki is made of strained yogurt with cucumbers, garlic, salt, usually olive oil, pepper, dill, sometimes lemon juice and parsley, or mint added. The cucumbers are either pureed and strained, or seeded and finely diced. Olive oil, olives, and herbs are often used as garnishes.
Soups and stews
Beans and Fries
Dumplings and meatballs
Processed meat
Rice dishes
Iraqi rice cooking is similar to the method used for Iranian chelow, a multistep process intended to produce just-tender, fluffy grains. A prominent aspect of Iraqi rice cooking is the hkaka, a crisp bottom crust. It differs slightly from the Iranian tahdig, which is a single thick piece; the hkaka contains some loose rice as well. Before serving, the hkaka is broken into pieces so that everyone is provided with some along with the fluffy rice.
- Dolma, the mixture of ground lamb or beef with rice is usually made with many fillings in the same preparing pot, as well as pomegranate juice, prominently used by North Iraqis to give it a unique taste. The Assyrians of Iraq may either call it dolma or yaprekh which is the Syriac term for stuffed grape leaves. Iraqi Arabs usually served dolma without yoghurt. Often chicken or beef ribs are added to the cooking pot, and sometimes served with the dolma instead of masta or khalwah. Iraqi dolma is usually cooked and served in a tomato-based sauce. In Mosul, dolma is very popular. In Mosul they include courgettes, tomatoes, onions, peppers and grape leaves. They are occasionally smoked.
- Biryani, a set of rice-based foods made with spices, rice, and meat/vegetables. and merchants, and is collectively popular in Iraq, Kuwait, Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Bangladesh, India and among Muslims in Sri Lanka.
- Khichdi, a food of Indian origin made from rice and lentils. Khichdi is commonly considered to be a comfort food and was the inspiration for the Anglo-Indian dish of kedgeree.
- Mujaddara, a dish consists of cooked lentils together with wheat or rice, garnished with onions that have been sauteed in vegetable oil.
- Pilaf
- Tabeet, a chicken stuffed with rice, tomatoes, dried apricots and raisins, with a strong cardamom flavor.
- Quzi, a rice-based dish served with very slow-cooked lamb and roasted nuts and raisins.
- Mutabbaq samak, fried fish served over stocked rice.
Sandwiches and wraps
- Sabich, a Middle-Eastern food consisting of pita stuffed with fried aubergine and hard boiled eggs. Local consumption is said to have stemmed a tradition among Iraqi Jews, who ate it on Shabbat morning.
- Shawarma, a Middle Eastern Arabic-style sandwich-like wrap usually composed of shaved lamb, goat, chicken, turkey, beef, or a mixture of meats. Shawarma is a popular dish and fast-food staple across the Middle East and North Africa.
Dairy
- Baladi cheese, a soft, white cheese originating from the Middle East. It has a mild yet rich flavor.
- Jameed, hard dry laban made from sheep's milk.
- Jibneh Arabieh, a simple cheese found all over the Middle East. It is particularly popular in the Persian Gulf area. The cheese has an open texture and a mild taste similar to Feta but less salty.
- Geimar, a creamy dairy product, similar to clotted cream, made in the Balkans, Turkey, Iran, other Middle Eastern nations, and Central Asia. It is made from the milk of water buffalos in the East or of cows in the West.
- Labneh, yogurt which has been strained in a cloth or paper bag or filter, traditionally made of muslin, to remove the whey, giving a consistency between that of yogurt and cheese, while preserving yogurt's distinctive sour taste.
Breads and pastries
- Burek, a type of baked or fried filled pastry. It is made of a thin flaky dough known as phyllo dough, and are filled with salty cheese, minced meat, potatoes or other vegetables.
- Ka'ak, refer to several different types of baked goods produced throughout the Arab world and the Near East.
- Kadaif, a very fine vermicelli-like pastry used to make sweet pastries and desserts.
- Kahie, layers of thin dough phyllo usually consumed warm for breakfast by adding cream Kaymak and light sugar syrup.
- Khubz, an Arabic flatbread that is part of the local diet in many countries of Western Asia.
- Laffa
- Lahmacun, a thin pizza topped with minced meat and herbs.
- Lavash, a soft, thin flatbread.
- Manakish, a pizza consisting of dough topped with thyme, cheese, or ground meat.
- Markook, a type of flatbread common in the countries of the Levant. It is baked on a domed or convex metal griddle, known as Saj. It is usually sizable, about 2 feet, and thin, almost transparent.
- Pita
- Samoon, a flat and round bread, similar in texture and taste to the Italian ciabatta.
- Sfiha, a pizza-like dish traditionally made with ground mutton rather than the more modern addition of lamb, or beef in Brazil. They are "open faced" meat pies with no top dough. Sfiha were much like dolma; simply ground lamb, lightly spiced, wrapped in brined grape leaves.
Condiments, sauces and spices
- Amba, a tangy mango pickle condiment. Commonly eaten as a side dish and sometimes as a sandwich topping.
- Baharat, a spice mixture. Typical ingredients include: allspice, black pepper corns, cardamom seeds, cassia bark, cloves, coriander seeds, cumin seeds, nutmeg, dried red chili peppers or paprika.
- Jallab, a type of syrup popular in the Middle East made from dates, grape molasses and rose water.
- Mahleb, an aromatic spice made from the seeds of the St Lucie Cherry.
- Dibis, a thick, very sweet date syrup. Often mixed with tahini to create a dip.
- Rose water
- Tahini , a paste of ground sesame seeds used in cooking. Middle Eastern tahini is made of hulled, lightly roasted seeds.
- Za'atar, a mixture of herbs and spices used as a condiment.
Sweets
The traditional Iraqi kleicha cookies are believed to have their roots in Mesopotamian qullupu—date filled pastries baked in a wood-fired oven called tannour. In modern times, other types of cookies and cakes are made at home, usually flavored with cardamom or rose water. Some variations include the disc-shaped khfefiyyat, half-moon shaped kleichat joz made with nuts, and date filled kleichat tamur.
Cookbooks dating to the Abbasid Caliphate between the 10th and 13th centuries include recipes for hundreds of desserts. The tradition continues into the modern day, but the rich, syrupy desserts like baklava are usually prepared for special occasions or religious celebrations, as most daily meals are usually followed by a simple course of seasonal fruit, especially dates, figs, cantaloupes, nectarines, apricots, pomegranates, peaches, mulberries, grapes or watermelons.
Though not as recognizable as baklava, the fried pastry called lauzeenaj, flavored with mastic and rose water, was a specialty in imperial Baghdad. Rosette-shaped fritters called zalabia are a local specialty, believed to take their name from Ziryab, a well-known Kurdish-Iraqi musician in the Caliphate of Cordoba. Baklava and zalabia are typical offerings during the Eid al-Fitr celebrations that follow Ramadan. Halqoum are traditionally given as gifts during the holiday.
- Halva
- Kanafeh, a pastry made with layers of semolina, white cheese and a sugary syrup sprinkled with rose water.
- Qatayef, an Arab dessert reserved for the Muslim holiday of Ramadan, a sort of sweet crepe filled with cheese or nuts. It was traditionally prepared by street vendors as well as households in the Levant and more recently has spread to Egypt.
- Mann al-samaʼ
- Luzina is a candy similar to Turkish lukum, made from ground fruits.
Beverages
- Arak, a clear, colourless, unsweetened aniseed-flavoured distilled alcoholic drink. Arak is usually not consumed straight, but is mixed in approximately 1/3 arak to 2/3 water, and ice is then added.
- Beer, a drink that originated in ancient Assyria and Babylon over 6,000 years ago.
- Coffee, a drink that has a strong and bitter taste, a popular beverage in Iraq.
- Sharbat, a chilled, sweet drink prepared from fruit juice or flower petals.
- Shinēna, a cold beverage of yogurt mixed with cold water, sometimes with a pinch of salt or dried mint added.
- Tea, also known as chai, is widely consumed throughout the day, especially in the mornings, after meals, and during social settings. It is prepared in a special way involving boiling tea in hot water, then placing it over a second tea pot with boiling water to let the tea infuse. Iraqi tea is renowned for being considerably stronger, richer and sweeter than those found in neighbouring countries, and is usually brewed with cardamom.