August 16, 2010

KIBBEH Mahshiyeh


The first kibbeh I made was the Kubbeh Hamustah which I made a lot during the winter month last year. It was the kind of perfect meal for the cold weather, very hearty, and satisfying. I have been wanting to make kibbeh that can be enjoyed during the hot summer as well. To me, this kibbeh is perfect and very versatile as it can be serve hot, at room temperature, or even cold. I adapted the recipe from Joumana's Kibbé Hamees, but using ground American bison instead of regular ground beef.


The Filling:

1 lb ground lamb
½ cup diced onion
1 teaspoon minced garlic
1 tablespoon seven spices, recipe follows
1 tablespoon smoked pimento (smoked paprika)
¼ cup finely chopped parsley
a few handful lightly toasted pine nuts
salt and pepper to taste
  • Heat the skillet over medium high heat, add ground lamb, stir and break up the lump with wooden spoon, add onion, lower the heat to medium. Cook until the onion is translucent, add garlic, seven spices, and smoked pimento, stir to mix, cook until fragrant and the raw smell disappear. Add, parsley, season with salt and pepper. Taste and adjust seasoning as needed. Cool completely, then stir in toasted pine nuts. Set aside or refrigerate.

The Kibbeh Dough:

1 cup fine bulghur (#2), soak with water for 15 minutes*
1 pound ground bison
½ cup diced onion
1 teaspoon minced garlic
1 tablespoon seven spices, recipe follows
salt and pepper to taste
canola or vegetable oil for frying

* I couldn't find Bulghur #1, so I added more time to soak the bulghur. If you are using bulghur #1, soak for 5 minutes.
  • Drain the bulghur, squeeze excess water, place it into food processor, add the rest of the ingredients. Pulse couple of time until well mix. Refrigerate couple of hours or overnight.
  • Take a lump of kibbeh dough with wetted hands, form into a ball about the size of apricot, make a deep hole in the center using your index finger, fill with lamb filling as much as you can fit in, close the opening by pressing the dough back together to cover the filling. Roll into oval shape, then press each end into pointy shape. To make your life easier, and less headache to read my instruction, follow this link on how to shape the kibbeh.
  • Fry in hot oil until golden brown. Serve with pomegranate sauce as she suggested, green tahini sauce, zhoug, or any condiment you desire.

Seven Spices:

½ tablespoon ground all spice
½ tablespoon cinnamon
1 tablespoon ground cumin
1 tablespoon ground ginger
¼ tablespoon ground cloves
¼ teaspoon ground nutmeg
5 kernels funegreek, grind
  • Mix all ingredients together, store in an airtight container.
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16 comments:

Rosa's Yummy Yums said...

Mmmmhhh, yummy kibbeh! That is a wonderful dish.

Cheers,

Rosa

Jeannie said...

Looks very delicious and exotic! Would love to taste it one day:)

Happy Cook said...

I have heard so much about this but never had the pleasure of having them, looks so so good.

Joanne said...

I love kibbeh...it's just such a flavor explosion. Truly one of the few ways I enjoy meat. Love this!

5 Star Foodie said...

I would love to try kibbeh! What amazing flavors with 7 spices & smoked paprika!

Xiaolu said...

Oh I never knew you had a savory cooking blog. Looks great and I like the cute shapes you made these in :).

Taste of Beirut said...

I am so thrilled that you made kibbeh! So many people, including lebanese people my generation and younger, don't want to bother with it anymore, just eating it at restaurants and it is not the same!
I must say yours looks superb and authentic and you make me yearn for some right this minute!

bella roz said...

I love strong, exotic flavors! Mmmm so much excitement going on in our mouthes and tummies!

Elra, please stop by my blog and look at an upcoming blog hop that I would like to know if you'd be interested in co-hosting, teaming up with me on, etc? I think that with your gardens and cooking style, that you would fit in perfectly with the theme!

Roz @ la bella vita

pigpigscorner said...

I've never heard of this but sounds really good!

inanoyster.com said...

wow! i've never seen/heard those before but they look awesome!

Sonia (Nasi Lemak Lover) said...

This is new to me, but it sound really good.

camelia said...

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FOODalogue said...

ooh...these look absolutely perfect...like they want to jump off the screen and into my mouth!

Pam said...

This looks delicious! I have a neighbor who makes it and know how great it is. Good one!

bewitchingkitchen.com said...

Oh, I love kibbeh, but have only made the "baked" version, served in a tray, with the stuffing as a layer in the middle.

Yours look spectacular, my mouth is watering.... (they are extremely popular in Sao Paulo, Brazil)

Cherine said...

I did not know about this blog, this is my first time here, great recipes u have!
I only knew abt elra's baking blog!!
Great discovery!! :)

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