Parsi cuisine

Parsi cuisine

Parsi cuisine is a blend of vegetarian Gujarati cuisine and non-vegetarian Iranian cuisine.

Primary meals

The basic feature of a Parsi lunch is rice, eaten with lentils or a curry. Curry is made with coconut and "ras" without, with curry usually being thicker than "ras". Dinner would be a meat dish, often accompanied by potatoes or other vegetable curry. "Kachubar" (a sharp onion-cucumber salad) accompanies most meals.

Popular Parsi dishes include:
* "chicken farcha" (fried chicken)
* "patra ni machhi" (steamed fish wrapped in banana leaf)
* "dhansak" (lamb, mutton, goat or chicken in lentil gravy)
* "sali murghi" (spicy chicken with fine potato crisps)
* "jinga nu pathio" (shrimp in spicy curry)
* "khichri" (rice with leftovers)
* "saas ni machhi" (yellow rice with pomfret fish fillets in white gravy)
* "jardaloo sali boti" (boneless mutton in an onion and tomato gravy with apricots and potato strips)
* "tamota ni russ chaval" (mutton cutlets with white rice and tomato gravy)

Also popular among Parsis, but less so elsewhere are the typical Parsi "eeda" (egg) dishes, which include "akuri" (scrambled eggs with spices) and the "pora" ("Parsi" omlette). Main dishes such as those mentioned above are often served with an egg on top.

Traditional breakfasts during the 1930's in Mumbai or in many South Gujarat villages consisted of "khurchan" (offal meats cooked with potatoes in a spicy gravy), and some variant of the ubiquitous deep fried, fried or half-fried eggs. In agrarian communities this would be washed down by copious quantities of coconut toddy, often straight off the tree.

Although in the not so distant past, vegetables were considered a 'poor peoples food', there is a presently a trend towards light eating, no red-meat and even vegetarianism.

Desserts

Common desserts ("vasanu", literally 'sweet dish') include "sev" (vermicelli), "ravo" (semolina). Also popular are "faluda" and "kulfi", both of which are adoptions from the cuisines of the Irani and Urdu-speaking communities.

nacks

Popular parsi snacks include "bhakhra" (deep fried sweet dough) "batasa" (flour and butter tea biscuits) "dar ni pori" (sweetened lentils stuffed in a light pastry) and "khaman na lavda" (dumplings stuffed with sweetened coconut).

References

*

Recipes

* [http://www.gourmetindia.com/pgview.php?id=139 Recipes for a Parsi festival meal]
* [http://www.parsicuisine.com/ Recipes from parsicuisine.com]


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать реферат

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Parsi people — Infobox Ethnic group group= Parsis poptime= c. 70,000 popplace= c. 70% in India, 5% in Pakistan and Sri Lanka, 25% elsewhere (largely the United Kingdom) langs= Gujarati, English,marathi rels= ZoroastrianismA Parsi ( gu. પારસી Pārsī ,… …   Wikipedia

  • Cuisine Iranienne — Cet article fait partie d’une série sur l art perse Les arts persans …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Cuisine d'Iran — Cuisine iranienne Cet article fait partie d’une série sur l art perse Les arts persans …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Cuisine of Karnataka — This article is part of the series …   Wikipedia

  • Cuisine of Kerala — This article is part of the series …   Wikipedia

  • Cuisine iranienne — La cuisine d Iran est diverse, chaque province ayant ses propres plats aussi bien que ses styles et traditions culinaires, distinctes selon leurs régions. Cela inclut une grande variété de plats comme par exemple le chelow kabab (barg, koobideh,… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Cuisine of Uttar Pradesh — This article is part of the series …   Wikipedia

  • Cuisine of Arunachal Pradesh — This article is part of the series …   Wikipedia

  • Asian cuisine — Beef noodle soup Asian cuisine styles can be broken down into several regional styles that have roots in the peoples and cultures of those regions. The major types can be roughly defined as East Asian with its origins in Imperial China and now… …   Wikipedia

  • South Asian cuisine — South Asian cuisine, also known as Desi cuisine, includes the cuisines from the Indian subcontinent. It has roots in South Asia, including practices taken from the Hindu beliefs practiced by the large population found in the region, alongside… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”