- Source: Libyan cuisine
The cuisine of Libya is a mix of Berber, Arab and Mediterranean cuisines with Ottoman and Italian influence. One of the most popular Libyan dishes is bazin, an unleavened bread prepared with barley, water and salt. Bazin is prepared by boiling barley flour in water and then beating it to create a dough using a magraf, which is a unique stick designed for this purpose.
In Tripoli, Libya's capital, the cuisine is particularly influenced by Italian cuisine. Pasta is common, and many seafood dishes are available. Southern Libyan cuisine is more traditionally Arab and Berber. Common fruits and vegetables include figs, dates, oranges, apricots and olives.
Pork consumption is forbidden to Muslims in Libya, in accordance with Sharia, the Islamic law. The consumption of alcoholic drinks is also forbidden to Libyan Muslims.
Common foods and dishes
Bazin is a common Libyan food made with barley flour and a little plain flour, which is boiled in salted water to make a hard dough, and then formed into a rounded, smooth dome placed in the middle of the dish. The sauce around the dough is made by frying chopped onions with lamb meat, turmeric, salt, cayenne pepper, black pepper, fenugreek, sweet paprika, and tomato paste. Potatoes can also be added. Finally, boiled eggs are arranged around the dome. The dish is then served with lemon and fresh or pickled chili peppers, known as amsyar. Batata mubattana (filled potato) is another popular dish that consists of fried potato pieces filled with spiced minced meat and covered with egg and breadcrumbs.
Additional common foods and dishes include:
Asida is a dish made of a cooked wheat flour lump of dough, sometimes with added butter, honey or rub.
Bazin
Rishta.
Breads, including flatbreads
Bureek, turnovers
Couscous, a North African dish of semolina
Filfel chuma or maseer, spicy pickled peppers, lemon, hot peppers and crushed garlic.
Ghreyba, butter cookies
Harissa is hot chili sauce commonly eaten in Eastern Maghreb. Main ingredients include chili peppers, such as the typical and local Baklouti pepper imported from Al-Andalus, or bird's eye chili and serrano peppers, and spices such as garlic paste, coriander, red chili powder, caraway and olive oil.
Hassaa, type of gravy
Magrood, date-filled cookies
Mhalbiya, type of rice pudding
Mutton, meat of an adult sheep
Rub is a thick dark brown, very sweet syrup extracted from dates or carob that is widely used in Libya, usually with asida.
Shakshouka is prepared using aged mutton or lamb jerky as the meat base of the meal, and is considered a traditional breakfast dish.
Shorba, lamb and vegetable soup with mint and tomato paste
Imbakbaka or Mbakbaka, a type of stew with pasta and meat
Usban, a traditional Libyan food made of guts stuffed with organs and herbs.
Kifta,
Gideed is an ancient Libyan method of preserving and dry-aging meat using fats and olive oil.
Rishta Cescas
Imgata (also known as Rishta Bourma) is a Libyan dish made with fresh homemade pasta cooked in a tomato-based sauce, often prepared with gideed.
Usban Zeer
Boourdeem, Meat cooked underground using primitive methods
= Desserts and beverages
=Makroudh
Ghoriba
Asida
Mathroda
Drua - (Libyan salep made from millet)
Mafruka
Kunafa
Zumeeta
Libyan tea, the Libyan tea is a thick beverage served in a small glass, often accompanied by peanuts. Regular American/British coffee is available in Libya, and is known as "Nescafé" (a misnomer). Soft drinks and bottled water are also consumed. The Maghrebi mint tea is also a popular drink.
All alcoholic drinks have been banned in Libya since 1969, in accordance with Sharia, the religious laws of Islam. However, illegally imported alcohol is available on the black market, alongside a homemade spirit called Bokha. Bokha is often consumed with soft drinks as mixers.
See also
Culture of Libya
Arab culture
Arab cuisine
Berber cuisine
Berber culture
List of African cuisines
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Libyan cuisine
- Libyan (disambiguation)
- Harissa
- Arab cuisine
- Berber cuisine
- Libya
- Middle Eastern cuisine
- Mafrum
- Couscous
- Shakshouka