hjhkj asked:
wat does the ppl of Islam in Amman usually eat breakfast, lunch and dinner for example, in our ppl eats bacon for breakfast, salad for lunch and steak for lunch
Related Blogs
- Related Blogs on Bacon
- Spring Onion, Bacon & Herb Bread Pudding » The Mill
- The Irish Economy » Blog Archive » Bacon on Pricing Assets and …
- Related Blogs on Islam
- The face of Islam in America « Miscellany101’s Weblog
- Defeating Political Islam: The New Cold War « Islamophobes United
- Related Blogs on Ppl
Related Blogs
- Related Blogs on Bacon
- Spring Onion, Bacon & Herb Bread Pudding » The Mill
- The Irish Economy » Blog Archive » Bacon on Pricing Assets and …
- Related Blogs on Islam
- The face of Islam in America « Miscellany101’s Weblog
- Defeating Political Islam: The New Cold War « Islamophobes United
- Related Blogs on Ppl




1 response so far ↓
1 EmM // Apr 11, 2009 at 6:03 pm
Jordan is not getting the credit it deserves for the proliferation of hummus with tahini, baba ghanouj, falafel, and other dishes we tend to consider generically Middle Eastern, but which certainly are served in Jordan.
Traditional dishes in Jordan were based on cereals, legumes, wild herbs, cracked wheat, mushrooms, wild artichoke, and sheep and goat products, including yogurt. The national dish is the Mansaf, a Bedouin specialty of lamb seasoned with aromatic herbs, lightly spiced, cooked in dried yogurt, and served on a large platter of rice, almonds, pine kernels, and other nuts (the use of the special dried yogurt is what sets Jordanian Mansaf apart from that of Syria, Saudi Arabia, and Iraq, where it is also considered the “national dish”).
Other popular dishes are lamb kebabs, Jaaj mashwee (roasted chicken accompanied by bread, salad, and hummus), Fasooliyeh (a tomato-based bean stew, usually served with rice), Bazelleh (A tomato based pea stew, usually served with rice), Batatas (potato stew), Mlukhiyyeh (a kind of spinach stew cooked with chicken or beef pieces and served with rice), Mahshi (vegetables stuffed with rice and meat), and Waraq dawaalee (steamed grape leaves stuffed with rice and meat).
Leave a Comment