Tabriz meatballs
Alternative names | Tabriz Köftesi, Kufteh Tabrizi, Koofteh Tabrizi |
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Type | Sour soup |
Place of origin | Iran |
Region or state | Iranian Azerbaijan |
Main ingredients | Ground meat, rice, leeks, split peas, and other ingredients |
Variations | Ciorbă de perişoare, Sulu köfte, Yuvarlak, Smyrna meatballs |
Tabriz Köftesi (Template:Lang-az) also known as Kufteh Tabrizi (Template:Lang-fa), is an Iranian meatball recipe which is originally from North West region of Iran from the city of Tabriz. The dish normally include a big meat ball with meat, rice, yellow split peas, herbs and other ingredients and its juice which served in a separate dish with shredded Sangak or Lavash bread before the main course.
Preparation
The ingredients are ground beef, rice, yellow split peas, leeks, mint, parsley, onion, and Persian spices for the dough and boiled egg, walnut, fried onion, and dried apricot for the core of the Kufteh. Boil rice and split peas separately each for fifteen minutes. Cut one onion in small pieces and fry it in vegetable oil. Mix and cut all of the vegetables into small pieces. Grate another onion in tiny pieces and drain out its juice. Mix all ground beef, ground onion, boiled rice, boiled peas and vegetables with Azerbaijani spices and salt and squish them all. Make a ground ball of the pulp and put the apricot, and boiled egg in the middle. Add tomato paste and barberries to the frying onion and fry for couple of minutes again then pour water inside it and heat it up till it boils. Carefully put the meatballs inside the boiling mix and keep it boiling for half an hour. [1]
Etymology
Tabriz Köftesi or Kufteh Tabrizi means meatball of Tabriz. The word is derived from Kūfteh: in Persian, kuftan (کوفتن) means to beat or to grind.[2]
See also
- Iranian cuisine
- Azerbaijani cuisine
- Sulu köfte
- Ciorbă de perişoare
- Smyrna meatballs
- Yuvarlak
- Harput meatballs
- List of soups
Notes and references
- ^ http://www.aashpazi.com/kooftehtabrizi Koofteh Tabrizi
- ^ Alan S. Kaye, "Persian loanwords in English", English Today 20:20-24 (2004), doi:10.1017/S0266078404004043.