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#1 Posted : Friday, March 30, 2018 8:41:23 PM(UTC)

Seeking a recommendation for egyptian recipes?

#2 Posted : Friday, April 6, 2018 5:18:52 PM(UTC)

Hi, Jan!


Apart from Koshari, Kheyar Mekhalel or Sharkaseya I have not tried much, in spite that I have cooked a lot of Middle Eastern dishes. Some of my all time favourite books in this are the ones written by Arto der Haroutunian. But I am not sure if I answered correctly to your question.


Kind regards,


Mar

#4 Posted : Friday, April 13, 2018 11:57:13 PM(UTC)
I have three I've picked up. I’m Egyptian so I make family recipes mostly but books on Egyptian food are hard to come by. The three I have include:
Egyptian soups: hot and cold by John Feeney
The Taste Of Egypt: home Cooking from the Middle East by Dyna Eldaief
My Grandmothers kitchen: traditional dishes sweet and savory by Magda Megdawy

The soup book I got from the library when they culled their cookbooks. My Grandmothers kitchen I bought in Egypt but it is in English. I’m not sure if it is available elsewhere.
#5 Posted : Sunday, April 15, 2018 8:38:50 PM(UTC)
Thanks! I will explore. There is a real abscence of online and offline recipes for authentic egyptian food. I expect it will emerge, but I am keen to find some good sources. These look great
#6 Posted : Thursday, April 19, 2018 7:36:00 PM(UTC)

The Taste of Egypt is a favorite of mine. My review can be found here at Eat Your Books. 

#7 Posted : Friday, April 20, 2018 7:13:48 PM(UTC)
Having lived in Egypt, I think there is a good reason for the dearth of Egyptian cookbooks—it’s just not a foodie culture. There is very little that I ate there that I would consider making, or that I feel nostalgic about or that I miss. Good luck finding a good Egyptian cookbook.
#8 Posted : Tuesday, October 11, 2022 11:44:59 AM(UTC)

Ahahah reviving this post as I am going to travel to Egypt in January... In French it is worse... I went into a bookstore asking for an Egyptian cookbook, and i could feel the condescendance... "in 20 years of career i have never seen a book on Egyptian cooking" (and actually I looked it up and not far from the truth).


So I looked in English and I finally ordered "Eat, habibi, eat" (indexed!) and an old version of a French book. I will let you know what i think once i have been there... lol


Sorry I corrected all the typos in my original email (French phone autocorrect).

#9 Posted : Tuesday, October 11, 2022 11:37:34 PM(UTC)

I don't think she's done anything specific to Egypt but one of my favorite food writers is Claudia Roden who herself is Eygptian.  She's written numerous books on middle eastern cookery so I'd start there.

#10 Posted : Tuesday, October 11, 2022 11:55:51 PM(UTC)
Michael Mina and Kate Leahey seem to have a cookbook on Egypt they are working on. I’ve seen posts on IG
#11 Posted : Wednesday, October 12, 2022 6:55:52 AM(UTC)

Agree with other that that Claudia Roden is your best bet, she was born and brought up in Egypt and learned to cook there, her New Book of Middle Eastern Food has many Egyptian recipes in it, and nice background information and little stories, her recipes usually work well for me  


I enjoyed the food I ate in Egypt, especially that made by Bedouin cooks around Sinai

#12 Posted : Wednesday, October 12, 2022 1:29:42 PM(UTC)

This is a recommendation for a specific recipe, not a cookbook: I really like the Saveur recipe for koshary. This recipe matches pretty closely what I remember from the semester I spent in Cairo back in college. Koshary is a popular Egyptian street food - lentils, chickpeas, rice, and pasta, served with fried onions and a spicy tomato sauce. It's carb heavy but very tasty!

#13 Posted : Thursday, October 13, 2022 6:57:02 AM(UTC)

MollyB;27033 wrote:
This is a recommendation for a specific recipe, not a cookbook: I really like the Saveur recipe for koshary. This recipe matches pretty closely what I remember from the semester I spent in Cairo back in college. Koshary is a popular Egyptian street food - lentils, chickpeas, rice, and pasta, served with fried onions and a spicy tomato sauce. It's carb heavy but very tasty!


Thank you! I will check out Claudia Roden. Taste of Egypt looks great as well although difficult to source out here, maybe Amazon but I do prefer to work with our beautiful Anglo-French or cookbook stores here in Paris (Galignani and Librairie Gourmande, in the odd chance you are listening, I love you !). 


Thank you also for koshary - I read about it in my travel guides, but of course never tasted it!


If any of you has more recipes, or even restaurant recommendations, especially in Cairo and Louxor, please forward. Going to Cairo, then Louxor then cruise over several days down to Abou Simbel, and then up the coast.

#14 Posted : Sunday, October 16, 2022 3:24:30 AM(UTC)

I'd urge you to get Claudia Roden's New Book of Middle Eastern Food, as others have suggested. I lived in Egypt for a year and when I came back, this was the book which enabled me to recreate the dishes I enjoyed. She also writes so beautifully and evocatively about the food and the culture.


It doesn't have the same range, but Colette Rossant's Apricots on the Nile: A Memoir with Recipes is also lovely.

#3 Posted : Sunday, October 16, 2022 3:30:13 AM(UTC)

Marimar;15523 wrote:
Apart from Koshari, Kheyar Mekhalel or Sharkaseya I have not tried much, in spite that I have cooked a lot of Middle Eastern dishes. Some of my all time favourite books in this are the ones written by Arto der Haroutunian. But I am not sure if I answered correctly to your question.


I like Arto der Haroutunian's books too, but I feel he has a better insight into food from the Levant. I don't remember so many dishes I recall from Egypt in his books.

#15 Posted : Sunday, October 23, 2022 9:26:19 PM(UTC)

I was also going to suggest Claudette Rossant's Apricots on the Nile. I see that it was originally published with the title of Memories of a Lost Egypt, and is also available in French (translated from English) with the title of Mémoires d'une Égypte perdue.

#16 Posted : Sunday, January 15, 2023 2:05:10 AM(UTC)

Just came back - I agree it is not a foodie culture .. well actually there are good cooks in the Louxor/Assouan region (including the chef on my boat, bless him), but most dishes are borrowed or shared with other middle-eastern countries or North Africa (versions of hummus, tatsikis, wine leaves, oriental styles desserts/biscuits, variations on rice).


Notable exceptions (there might be more, I do not pretend to be exhaustive :) : 


- koshary as mentioned earlier in this thread


- Molekheya/Molokhia (soup based on "corete" which is an herb quite rare in western countries)


- Foul and galettes made of foul (Egyptian version of breakfast beans)


- Stuffed vegetables (Mahshi)


- Kunafa : Dessert made with fried noodles (odd I know, but it is good :)

#17 Posted : Sunday, January 15, 2023 12:27:29 PM(UTC)

Molekheya Is popular in Japan too known for its sticky property when cooked that Japanese love and health benefits.  BTW, I want to make that stuffed zucchini recipe and just ordered another small gadget for coring zucchini and cucumbers. 

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