Somali cuisine


'Somali cuisine varies from region to region and is a fusion of different Somali culinary traditions. It is the product of Somalia's tradition of trade and commerce. Some notable Somali delicacies include Sabaayad/Kimis, Laxooh/Canjeero, xalwo, sambuusa, bariis iskukaris, and Muqmad/Odkac.
Pork consumption is forbidden to Muslims in Somalia, in accordance with Sharia, the Islamic law.

Breakfast

Breakfast is an important meal for Somalis, who often start the day with some style of tea or coffee. The tea is often in the form of haleeb shai in the north. The main dish is typically a pancake-like bread similar to Ethiopian injera, but smaller and thinner. It might also be eaten with a stew or soup. In addition to Canjeero many Somali people eat chopped meat mixed with some cumin, garlic, onions and pepper.
Flatbread referred to as rooti is consumed in all over Somalia. Nationally, a sweeter and greasy version of canjeero known as malawax or malawah is a staple of most home-cooked meals.

Lunch

Lunch is often an elaborated main dish of pasta or rice spiced with cumin, cardamom, cloves, and sage. The diffused use of pasta, such as spaghetti, comes from the Italians. It is frequently presented with a heavier stew than the Italian pasta sauce. As with the rice, it is often served with a banana.
Spaghetti can also be served with rice, forming a novelty dish referred to as "Federation". The dish is usually served with equal portions of rice and spaghetti, split on either side of a large oval plate. It is then layered with assorted stewed meats and vegetables, served with salad and an optional banana. It has been suggested that the name of the dish is derived from the union of two dishes in Somalia and also from the size and quantity of the food. You will not find this dish served in the average Somali household, since it is uncommon to cook both rice and pasta in one meal. It is instead more common to order the dish from traditional Somali restaurants, where both rice and spaghetti are always readily available. Hence, its novelty status.
In Somalia many people or tribes who have Arab influences eat some Arab cuisines such as ful with kimis or white bread also with hummus. Other dishes like falafel with hummus or eaten with pita bread and salad and hummus.
Another popular dish in the South is called Iskukaris, a hot pot of rice, vegetables and meat, is a regional staple. Beyond the many styles of Hot pot, rice is usually served with meat and/or a banana on the side. In Mogadishu, steak and fish are widely eaten.
Southern Somalis commonly consume a soft cornmeal referred to as soor or Asida. It is mashed with fresh milk, butter and sugar, or presented with a hole in the middle filled with maraq or olive oil.
, a Somali camel meat and rice dish
A variation of the chapati is the sabaayad/kimis. Like the rice, it is served with maraq and meat on the side. The sabaayad of Somalia is often somewhat sweet, and is cooked in a little oil.
Italian Polenta, called Soor in Southern Somalia, is used in the Banaadir area, mainly around Merca and Jowhar
Popular drinks at lunch are balbeelmo, raqey and isbarmuunto. In Mogadishu, fiimto and laas are also common. In the northwest, the preferred drinks are cambe and tufaax.
Bariis iskukaris is also popular in Somali cuisine. This traditional Somali rice dish is cooked and then fried with some onions, any meat and then mixed with a Somali spice mixture called xawaash which contains cumin, coriander, turmeric, cardamon, black pepper, cloves, and nutmeg. It is traditionally served at Somali weddings.

Dinner

Dinner in Somalia is served as late as 9 pm. During Ramadan, supper-time often follows Tarawih prayers, sometimes as late as 11 pm. Cambuulo, a common dinner dish, is made from well-cooked azuki beans mixed with butter and sugar. The beans, which on their own are referred to as digir, can take up to five hours to finish cooking when left on the stove at a low temperature. Qamadi is also used; cracked or uncracked, it is cooked and served just like the azuki beans.
Rooti iyo xalwo, slices of bread served with a gelatinous confection, is another dinner dish. Muufo, a variation of cornbread, is a dish made of maize and is baked in a foorno. It is eaten by cutting it into small pieces, topped with sesame oil and sugar, then mashed together with black tea.
Before sleeping, a glass of milk spiced with cardamom is often consumed.

Snacks

Sambusa, the Somali variation of the Desi samosa, is a triangular snack that is commonly eaten throughout Somalia during the afur. The Somali version is spiced with hot chili pepper, and the main ingredient is often ground meat. Kabaab is a snack e
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aten in western Somalia or kebab sticks with vegetables or kofta kebab. chips but homemade chips are made with fresh potato and some black pepper. Fruits such as mango, guava, banana and orange are eaten throughout the day as snacks.

Sweets

There are many sweets eaten during festive occasions, such as weddings, parties or Eid. Among these are baalbaaloow, shuushuumoow, bur hindi, bur tuug, and qumbe, the latter of which is made from coconuts mixed with sugar to form a bar.

After-meal

Somalis traditionally perfume their homes after meals. Frankincense or a prepared incense, or bukhoor in the Arabian Peninsula, is placed on top of hot charcoal inside an incense burner or censer. It then burns for about ten minutes. This keeps the house fragrant for hours. The burner is made from soapstone found in specific areas of Somalia,
See also
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