Shirazi Salad with everything
Posted: 25 July 2012 Filed under: Shirazi Salad with everything, Uncategorized | Tags: beat-the-heat, booteh_recipes, food_photography, Persian_cuisine, shiraz 2 CommentsWhat is renown among Iranians everywhere as “salad-e Shirazi” is, in fact, a common and popular green salad everywhere in Iran. It is simply considered more authentic when made by a Shirazi or consumed in Shiraz.
It is refreshing, tasty and goes with almost all types of Iranian dish, especially with mixed-rice verities, such as cabbage-mixed polow.
Ingredients: It only takes three vegetables to make it: Read the rest of this entry »
Cherry jam (whole fruit)
Posted: 18 July 2012 Filed under: Cherry jam (whole fruit), Uncategorized | Tags: cherry-jam, Daryabandari, food_photography, Persian_cuisine Leave a commentMy favorite type of jam, made from any type of fruit, is the ones made with whole or cut fruits, rather than crushed fruits with lots of jelly-like pectin in them. And cherry jam, or morabaay albaaloo as we call it Persian, is on the very top of my list followed by quince and carrot. My sister has a couple of happy cherry trees in her yard providing us all with our yearly consumption of home-made cherry jam. Here is how we make it, in traditional way, with N. Daryabandari’s useful tips and recipe:
Ingredients: Cherries, 1 kg, pitted and washed. Sugar 1kg.
Fresh lime drink (sharbat)
Posted: 3 July 2012 Filed under: Beverages, Fresh lime drink (sharbat), Uncategorized | Tags: beat_the_heat, booteh_recipes, food_photography, Persian_cuisine, summer_drink Leave a commentIn Iran, a hugely popular summer drink is “sharbat” often made from extracts of aromatic flowers and herbs (called aragh) or fruit juice. Sharbat is usually slightly sweetened, sometimes diluted with water, and always mixed with ice cubes. In a hot summer day when you visit a friend or family the first thing they would do is hand you a refreshing nice glass of sharbat – one type of or another.
Fresh lime juice sharbat is among the most popular in Iran, because unlike flower extracts, lime is easily found throughout the country. It is popular also because lime has an amazing quality to quench your thirst in addition to having so many health benefits. Here is how you prepare it (quite similar to lemonade except you use lime instead of lemon):
Iced cantaloupe & rosewater
Posted: 22 June 2012 Filed under: Iced cantaloupe & rosewater, Uncategorized | Tags: beat-the-heat, booteh_recipes, cantaloupe, dessert, faloodeh_taalebi, food_photography, Persian_cuisine Leave a commentFor the past couple of days, here in Montreal, we have had a record breaking heat wave, feeling like 40 C with humidex. The wave brought back the memory of a refreshing iced desert I used to have back home in Shiraz, Iran, called “faloodeh taalebi”. I made iced cantaloupe after so many years and God knows it was all I needed to beat the heat! See how quick and hassle free it is:
All you need is one plump sweet cantaloupe. Cut it in half and spoon out the seeds. Cut each half in two lengthwise slices, then with the sharp knife cut across the base to separate the hard skin. In a nice bowl, coarsely grate slices, and don’t mind the juice produced in the bowl! Add one tbsp. rose water (optional). Some people add half tbsp. sugar, especially if the cantaloupe was not sweet enough. I personally prefer the mild and natural sweet and do not add sugar. Mix and place the bowl in freezer for 1 hour (at least), or until it is fairly solid on he top. Spoon it as you would with ice cream. No cooking, no oven dessert in this heat! This is a perfect cool summer dessert and I have more beat-the-heat suggestions upcoming.
Stuffed whole fish
Posted: 9 April 2012 Filed under: Stuffed whole fiish, Uncategorized | Tags: booteh_recipes, Bushehr, food_photography, Persian_cuisine, Sea bass, stuffed_fish 20 CommentsFried stuffed whole fish is another ‘region-specific’ type of Persian cuisine which I relate to so strongly because my parents were originally from that region – Bushehr.
Even as a child I used to love this dish and I remember so vividly each time we had it for lunch I had to bother somebody sitting next to me to rid my portion of fish bones for me before I could attack my plate. I still prepare and cook stuffed fish my mom used to. Replacing the pretty, slender, round-bodied raashgoo and shurideh (two types of Persian Gulf fishes) with Sea bass does not seem to matter anymore; I still enjoy this dish enormously. Hope you do too.
Miracle soup for the cold
Posted: 4 April 2012 Filed under: Aash and Soups, Miracle soup for the cold, Uncategorized | Tags: beans, booteh_recipes, coriander, food_photography, get-well_soup, Persian_cuisine, spinach, stock 2 Comments
This is my magic recipe for common cold, flu and general malady, although I do make this soup occasionally just for the fun of it. To the testimony of a host of my friends and relatives who had passed by when they had not been feeling well, this soup does wonders knocking off the cold, especially if you take it with another anti-cold remedy of mine Hot Whisky!
Ingredients: (5 serving). Half a chicken (bone in, skinless), cleaned and washed. Onion, 1 medium, thickly sliced lengthwise. Lentil and red beans ½ cup each. Split beans and rice, ¼ cup each (All washed and drained). Turnips, and pumpkins, skinned, seeded (for pumpkin), and cubed, two cups each. Fresh coriander and spinach, chopped, 2 cups each. Turmeric ¼ tbsp. Lime juice, 1 tbsp. Salt and black pepper to taste.
Mixed herb rice &smoked fish
Posted: 30 March 2012 Filed under: Mixed herb rice and smoke fish, Uncategorized | Tags: booteh_recipes, food_photography, herb_rice, Norooz, Persian_cuisine, sabzi_polow-mahi, smoked_fish Leave a commentI promised to post Iranian norooz-specific traditional dish, mixed herb rice and fish (sabzi polow mahi), since traditionally it is prepared and served on the first day of spring (often, along with kookoo sabzi). Well, better late than never! The good news is that the recipe I have here is the easiest AND the most delicious one – cross my heart! Special thanks to my sister, Atefeh the chef!
Ingredients (6 serving) Read the rest of this entry »
Egg and spinach breakfast (nargesi)
Posted: 5 March 2012 Filed under: Egg and spinach omelette, Jams, Yogurt and fruit/veg based, Uncategorized | Tags: booteh_recipes, breakfast, egg, food_photogaphy, Persian_cuisine, spinach Leave a commentThis simple and pretty breakfast is called naregsi in Persian, alluding to narcissus flower or narges.
Ingredients (1 Serving): Read the rest of this entry »
Dill and broad beans rice with pot roast
Posted: 25 February 2012 Filed under: Dill/broad beans rice with pot roast, Uncategorized | Tags: booteh_recipes, broad_bean, dill, food_photography, main_dish, mixed_polow, Persian_cuisine, pot_roast 9 CommentsThe Persian name of the above dish is “shevid baghali polow” with “goosht” 🙂 It is considered a festive dish, with so many variations in different Iranian cities. My culinary adventure in this case includes preparing the meat component of the dish in “pot roast” style.
I strongly recommend it over the more traditional way of “cooking’ the meat in water.
Part 1: Pot Roast
Ingredients:
- Veal (or beef) boneless chunks appropriate for roast (loin, or fillet), 500-600 grams, washed and patted dry.
- Carrot, 1 medium, thickly sliced lengthwise.
- onions, 2 medium, thickly sliced lengthwise.
- Garlic, 3 cloves.
- Olive oil, 2 tbsp.
- Turmeric and Iranian all spice (advieh) for mixed rice, ½ tbsp. each.
- Saffron 1 tea spoon.
- Salt and pepper to taste.
Method: In a medium size thick-bottomed pot, heat oil. Rob salt, pepper, and advieh all over meat’s chunks and brown each side for a few minutes over medium heat. Transfer the roasts into a platter. Add onions and garlic to the pan and cook for two minutes, then add carrots on the top. Sit the roast on top of onions and carrot. Turn the heat to minimum, cover with a tight lid and slow cook for at least two hours. You will not need to add any water at all! The roast will release its liquid and cooks itself at the core in the water produced by onions and carrots. You will see that at the end of cooking process (two hours or so) you will get a thick tasty broth and an extremely tender and savory roast meat.
Part 2: Mixed rice:
Ingredients:
- Rice, 4 cups.
- Fresh or defrosted broad beans, shelled, skinned and split in two, 400gr. (never use canned broad beans! They are already too cooked, or too transformed in color and taste for this purpose. The picture shows what I easily find here in Montreal in the Middle Eastern supermarkets)
- Fresh dill, washed and chopped, ½ cup + 2 tbsp. dried dill.
- Turmeric, ¼ tbsp.
- Pinch of saffron.
- Salt, oil, water, as needed.
Method: Prepare rice in usual way as if for plain rice (soaked in salted water, drained, boiled in lots of water, drained, and steamed cooked for at least one hour). This type of mixed polow is a bit different from the others in two ways:
1) At the stage when you add your soaked and drained rice to the boiling water, add a pinch of turmeric.
2) Just before you judge the grains to have been cooked at the core and ready to go to the colander, add the board beans as well. They should not cook in the water more than a couple of minutes though or will go mushy. Drain rice (now mixed with broad beans) in a fine meshed colander. Do so a bit earlier than you normally would. Once in colander, add the dried and fresh dill and shake the colander hard a few times (do not stir). Prepare the pot’s bottom with oil and bread or rice for tahdig, mound the mixture of rice, dill, beans back to the pot. Sprinkle a pinch of saffron and 2 tbsp. of broth (from your pot roast) and cover the pot with the lid. When you notice steams building inside the pot, wrap the lid in a clean kitchen cloth and put it back on. Allow at least one hour for the mixed polow to steam cook.
You could serve the mixed rice and the roast veal, accompanied by its cooked onion and broth separately. I rather place the meat in the middle of the mixed rice and serve separately only its broth for those who prefer their plate a bit juicier. Like many other mixed-polow, this one should be served hot and it goes very well with Iranian torshi, fresh herbs and Shirazi salad ![]()














