Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Kebabs

Kebab (from Persian, kabāb) means "grilled (or broiled) meat" in Persian and Turkish (spelled Kebap in Turkish). Kebab is usually made of lamb and beef, although chicken and fish can be used for some styles.
Perhaps the earliest recipe is in the tenth-century Kitab al-Tabeekh كتاب الطبيخ (book of cookery) by Ibn Sayyar al-Warraq of Baghdad. His recipe for Kebab Khalis uses thin slices of lean meat, salted and grilled in an ungreased frying pan.
Food historians generally attribute the origin of kebabs to ancient Middle Eastern cooks. In a land where fuel was scarce, this was a very efficient way to cook meat. Small pieces of meat (smaller the cut, faster they cook) threaded on skewers would have required very little fire. The recipes and combinations are endless


DEFINITION

A dish consisting basically of small pieces of meat threaded on to skewers and grilled or roasted. It originated in Turkey and eventually spread to the Balkans and the Middle East. The name is a shortened form of the Tukish sis kebab, sis meaning skewer and kebab meaning roast meat."
---Larousse Gastronomique




EVOLUTION OF KEBAB IN INDIA



"Kebab. Roasting marinated meat on spit while basting with fat is described both in Sanskrit and Tamil literature...the kabab has a distinct identity as a dainty from the Middle East which is particularly favoured by the Muslims in India...Ibn Battuta records chicken kaba being served by royal houses during the Sultanate period. Even common folk at kabab and paratas for breakfast, and in Mugal India a few centuries later it was still naan and kabab. It flourished as food for common people during nawabi rule over northern India & Nizam rule over Hydrabad.
---A Historical Dictionary of Indian Food



EQUIPMENTS


Skewer
skewer is a thin metal or wood stick used to hold small pieces of food together while grilling.
Metal skewers are typically stainless steel and will have a pointed tip on one end and a grip of some kind on the other end for ease of removing the food. Metal skewers are recommended for reuse, whereas wooden skewers are not.
Wooden skewers must be soaked in water prior to assembling and cooking to avoid burning. Wooden skewers are most often made from bamboo, however other woods may be used.

Rotating Spit

Tawa or Pan

Meat mincing machine

2 comments:

rash said...

i love ur recipes ,they r very polished n pretested .Plz keep the classic ones coming in more .If u can put the recipe for the kebab as well which is missing i think on the page .thankx a lot

rash said...

i love ur recipes ,they r very polished n pretested .Plz keep the classic ones coming in more .If u can put the recipe for the kebab as well which is missing i think on the page .thankx a lot