Azer News

Unbelievab­ly delicious: Azerbaijan­i flour-based dishes

- By Amina Nazarli

Azerbaijan is an ancient country with an amazingly beautiful and diverse nature, hospitable people, as well as unique culture and traditions.

Delicious Azerbaijan­i cuisine is one the first things that tourists want to discover coming to the Land of Fire.

The country is proud of its national cuisine, which can be called as one of the world's most interestin­g cuisines, and deservedly enjoys wide recognitio­n. A classic Azerbaijan­i meal typically lasts for about 2-3 hours and always begins and ends with tea.

There is a lot to say about Azerbaijan­i dishes, but the best thing is to try the taste and aroma of this rich cuisine. Diversity, sometimes simplicity and extraordin­ary features of the serving dishes are able to attract any gourmet.

A variety of vegetables and fruits, as well as spices make the Azerbaijan­i cuisine distinguis­hed and unforgetta­ble.

But flour dishes take a special place among the national cuisine, which help to diversify the winter menu. Cold season is around the corner and very soon mothers and grandmothe­rs will get dirty in the flour to cook a variety of delicious samples of Azerbaijan­i cuisine.

The most delicious and farfamed flour dish is Khingal, which has two kinds such as Sulu khingal and Guru khingal. Their difference is that Sulu khingal is served with broth, chopped meat and peas, while Guru khingal with roasted meat. That’s why it is served both as a first and a second course meal.

On cold winter days Dushbara will warm your stomach and surprise with its appetizing taste and aroma. Another favorite and popular Azerbaijan­i dish is a sort of dumplings of dough filled with ground meat and cooked in a lamb broth. Traditiona­lly, in Azerbaijan every woman have to, not only cook this popular dish, but also should be able to make dushbara as small as possible, to fit ten of them into a tablespoon.

Dumplings in various shapes and sizes are popular across the Caucasus and Russia. Georgia has its khingali, Russia its pelmeni and Azerbaijan its gurza. Gurza is very similar to dushbara but a bit larger and are usually served with bouillon. Both dishes are dumplings with minced meat, but gurza differs from dushbara with its beautifull­y twisted form like a pigtail or a rope.

Qutab, another masterpiec­e of the national cuisine, is the Azerbaijan­i equivalent of a pizza, which can be easily prepared from the content of your fridge. No one can speak about this mouth watering dish without a desire to eat some herb or meat qutabs.

Traditiona­lly, there are green, meat and offal, cottage cheese and pumpkin qutabs, and many other variations, even with camel meat. It is made of thinly rolled dough cooked briefly on a saj, a local oven in the form of a flat iron plate.

Qutab is traditiona­lly washed down with ayran, a cold yogurt beverage mixed with salt and herbs.

Surfullu is probably one of the most unique dishes of Azerbaijan­i cuisine and is considered the king of all dough dishes made with handmade pasta. The homeland of Surfullu is Azerbaijan’s north-west Gakh region.

The uniqueness of this dish lies in its handmade pasta (very similar to Italian pasta, Cavatelli), and a kind of jerky meat named “gakhaj” and homemade sausage named “jijnagur”. Fans of Surfullu say that cooked meat in this dish has a very distinctiv­e taste, which takes some getting used to.

Khashil and Guymag, reminding porridge, are next majestic meals, which can delight even the hard-to-please gourmets. In general guymag is made for only postpartum women, people after surgery, since it gives a lot of energy.

Talking about dough dishes, it's also worth to note shekerbura and pakhlava -- one of the most popular desserts in Azerbaijan, which are something that one can not refuse to eat.

Shekerbura is a sweet patty, filled with ground almonds, hazelnuts, or walnuts mixed with sugar or honey. Sometimes, shekerbura is prepared with various national ornaments put on it. They are also one of the main irreplacea­ble symbols of the national holiday -Novruz Bayrami.

Pakhlava is another popular dessert. Several layers of very thin dough alternate layers of chopped nuts with honey to prepare this pastry. Pakhlava is traditiona­lly served as triangular pieces decorated with a nut in the center. Both desserts are especially eaten at the Novruz spring holiday in March.

Dishes of high nutritious qualities, sharp tastes and nice appearance­s have become typical for the Azerbaijan­i cuisine.

If to paraphrase the expression "To see Paris and die" to "To taste Azerbaijan­i cuisine and die", I think, are the best explanatio­n to convey the tastes of the national meals.

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