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Turkish Rice – Pilav ( Pilaff – Pilaw )

11:09 pm

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Turkish Cuisine, Turkish Recipes, Turkish Foods, Turkish Kitchen, Turkish Culture

What would a meal in Turkey without pilav? One of the most basic maintenance and comfort of all Turkish dishes. The Turkish cooking rice rather different from ours in the west. The secret is to sizzle – that gives a creamy butter and melt in your mouth texture and flavor. It’s the gastronomic equivalent of sinking in a huge armchair in front of a wood fire.

If any dish can be said to form the base, the foundation of Turkish cuisine, then pilav is. It has a fascinating history and old, and can be found throughout the country that radiate from the Middle East, with a subtle change of vowels or consonants – in Uzbek pilaf, pilau in India, Albania pilaf …

Travel in Turkey and savor its delicate flavor and texture reassuring all possible types of hotels, from the humblest of local restaurants to the most elegant restaurant in Istanbul. Lokanta eat in a town and enjoy a lot of hot steam pilav adorned with a spoonful of peas or beans juicy poured over the top – a real meal in itself. Dine in an upscale hotel, and you’ll find the humble pilav, primped and preened, but serves as a soft lining. It is the perfect staple in any Turkish food.

Turkey pilav – pure, simple and perfect.

Ingredients (serves 4):

3 cups of rice (an ordinary kitchen glass will do, about 225 or 250 ml)
3 tablespoons butter (real butter gives it flavor, is not a substitute margarine)
3 cups water or broth (chicken soup works especially well, and to evoke the authentic flavor)
2 teaspoons salt

Preparation

1: Wash the rice in a colander with cold water. Put the rice in a bowl and cover with warm salt water. This position until cool. Wash thoroughly in cold water (water should be clear), then drain well.

2: Melt the butter in a saucepan until it just begins to sizzle, before it turns brown. Add rice and saute for 2-3 minutes, stirring continuously.

3: Pour the broth or water in the pan, bring to a boil, then lower heat to simmer. Do not stir while cooking pilau! Cook until the rice has absorbed all the water (10-15 minutes). Add salt and pepper to taste.

4: Take the pan from the heat and remove lid. Place a clean kitchen towel in the pot, and then replace the lid. Leave a “brew” for 5-10 minutes. Then serve.

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Turkish Rice, Turksh Pilav, Pilaff, Pilaw, Turkish Cuisine, Turkish Recipes, Turkish Foods, Turkish Kitchen, Turkish Culture

If you like extra fluffy rice, use a wooden spoon or a fork to stir just before serving.

A bit of plain yogurt and chopped spring onions for a delicious side.

Variations on a Theme

Pilav can be added and embellished in many different ways. You can mix the mushrooms (Mantarli pilavı), add the chickpeas (Nohutlu pilavı), or end up with rice altogether and use instead cracked wheat (bulgur pilavı). Here are a couple of tasty pilau alternatives for once you have mastered the basics.

Pilav with peas

Pilav recipe and quantities as above

Extra ingredients: 150 g peas

Boil the peas or saute in butter until tender. Follow the recipe for rice up to the point 3. When lowering the heat after boiling, add the peas, stir quickly, and then continue to follow the basic recipe.

Enjoy!

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Turkish Delight ( Lokum )

10:30 am

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What is Turkish Delight?

Turkish Delight is a delicious cake made of corn flour, flavorings and sugar syrup, sometimes also stuffed with nuts, honey and nuts. Turkish Delight is also known as Lokum in Turkey and Lokum is believed that the word derives from the joy that means in Arabic “al-hulkum Rahat ‘throat. Turkish Delight is a soft, gelatinous, and usually served in cubes, dust with icing sugar. Turkish Delight can be bought loose or wrapped in luxury boxes that make excellent gifts. Turkish Delight comes in many delicious flavors, but the taste of traditional rose water remains the most popular. Other flavors popular are pistachio, lemon, mint and hazelnut. Turkish Delight is often served after a meal with coffee, largely in the same way as after dinner mints, as the sweetness counteracts the bitter taste of Turkish coffee strong. Turkish Delight is also eaten during the day and served as a side dish with tea or coffee.

Make Turkish Delight

Although delicious, Turkish Delight is very simple to do and does not require luxury ingredients. A typical recipe for Turkish Delight involve gelatin powder, corn flour, powdered sugar and fill you want. The ingredients are all merged in water boiled, pour into a bowl and left to set for twenty four hours. When you are sure that the sugar mixture has set, cut it into cubes traditional and a touch of icing sugar. Homemade Turkish Delight makes a very good gift for family or friends, or why not do something to serve with coffee at a special dinner?

Read Article for History of  Turkish Delight

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