Iranian Food
Iranian cuisine, also widely referred to as Persian cuisine, includes
the foods, cooking methods,
and food traditions of Iran.
Iranian culinary styles have shared historical
interactions with the cuisines of the neighboring regions, including Caucasian cuisine,
abroad Kurdish cuisine, Turkish cuisine, Levantine cuisine, Greek cuisine, Central Asian
cuisine, and Russian cuisine.
Through the Persianized Central Asian Mughal dynasty,
aspects of Iranian cuisine were adopted into North Indian
cuisine.
Typical Iranian main dishes are combinations of rice with meat (such as lamb, chicken,
or fish), vegetables (such
as onions and
various herbs),
and nuts.
Fresh green herbs are frequently used, along with fruits such as plums, pomegranate, quince, prunes, apricots,
and raisins.
Characteristic Iranian flavorings such as saffron, dried lime, cinnamon,
and parsley are
mixed and used in some special dishes.
Iranian cuisine is gaining popularity in multicultural
cities such as London, Los Angeles, Washington, D.C., Vancouver,
and Toronto,
which have significant Iranian populations, Los Angeles and its environs, in
particular, are well known for the number and quality of Iranian restaurants,
which are usually centered around kebab, but also serve various Iranian stews and other
traditional dishes.
Comments
Post a Comment