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Egyptian food reflects a crossroads culture. Mediterranean and African spices complement a great variety of seasonal fruits, nuts, vegetables, grains, and legumes from the Nile Delta. Breakfast is usually ful, slow-cooked fava beans seasoned with cumin and lemon, and often served with an egg. At lunch, favas are mashed and fried to make tamiyya, similar to falafel, to fill dark flat bread for sandwiches. Cairo street food may be lamb kebab or the unique koshari, a mix of vermicelli, macaroni, rice, lentils, chickpeas, garlic and onions, dressed with tomato sauce and hot chili sauce. Some Egyptians serve a late afternoon British-style tea, and dinner is late in the evening. Egyptians were the first to tame the wild yeasts that turn barley into beer, and then to turn yeasty barley mash into leavening for bread. Though dark Turkish coffee is now more common than beer in Egypt, flat, round loaves of aish--the word means both ‘bread’ and ‘life’-- are still present at every table.
 
Display picture for Wesam Masoud

Featured Cook


Cooking Level: Expert

Home Town: Royal Oak, Michigan, USA
Living In: Cairo, Al-Qahirah, Egypt
About me:
I started cooking when I was around 16 - I had just moved to Cairo, Egypt to begin medical school and found myself living alone for the first time. Initial forays into cooking were limited to breakfast meals, like French Toast, Pancakes and Eggs. I soon progressed to cooking full 3 course meals a day for myself; all my dishes centered around Beef and steaks. I consider cooking not just a hobby, but a way of expressing myself gustatorially. also enjoy photography, and this has helped me develop the presentation of my dishes, not just for myself, but for everyone who asks me to cook them a meal! I intend to own and operate my own restaurant someday.

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DANAE

Cooking Level: Expert
Home Town: Alexandria, Al-Iskandariyah, Egypt
About me: GREEK-EGYPTIAN-AMERICAN COSMOPOLITAN LADY,WHO LOVES TO TRAVEL,DANCE,GYM,OUTDOOR ACTIVITIES,READING,COOKING,AND QUALITY TIME AT HOME WITH FAMILY AND FRIENDS,,,,

mollyannelian

Cooking Level: Intermediate
Home Town: Saint Paul, Minnesota, USA
Living In: Cairo, Al-Qahirah, Egypt
About me: An expat in Egypt learning new foods.
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magdoline

Cooking Level: Intermediate
Living In: Cairo, Al-Qahirah, Egypt
About me: busy mom
 

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Newest Reviews

The reviewer gave this recipe 5 stars. This recipe averages a 4.3 star rating.

Chocolate Chocolate Chip Nut Muffins

Reviewed on Dec. 8, 2008 by noha
I would give this more than a 5 star! its incredible... moist and gooey just perfect :) i did some of the other users suggestions and used 3/4 cup of cocoa, 3 tbsp oil and 11/2 cups of milk and 1/2 tsp of salt. I omitted the nuts since am not a fan and i ran out of chocochips so i used chunks of baking choco instead turned out just great :) yummoooo
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The reviewer gave this recipe 5 stars. This recipe averages a 4.76 star rating.

Carrot Cake III

Reviewed on Dec. 2, 2008 by noha
Baked this a few days ago :) tasted great as always... i added 1 cup of white sugar and 1 brown sugar which intensifies the taste of the cake.. i also added 4 tsp of cinnamon i love alot of it... I also used 1 cup of oil only instead of 1&1/4 cups. Great recipe!
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The reviewer gave this recipe 5 stars. This recipe averages a 4.61 star rating.

Best Big, Fat, Chewy Chocolate Chip Cookie

Reviewed on Oct. 22, 2008 by Gitana
I've made lots of chocolate chip cookies in my life, but these are THE BEST I HAVE EVER MADE. They flavor is good, if you want a stronger flavor I'd suggest adding a little more vanilla. The texture is exactly what it claims to be. Crunchy outside, chewy middles. I added slightly more flour because it seemed a bit runny, then I chilled in the fridge for just 30 minutes and used 1/8 measuring cups for smaller cookies. Rolled them in my hands, patted them down a bit and placed them on foil lined cookie sheets for 14 minutes. Perfect.
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