Qutab

Qutab is an Azerbaijani dish made from thinly rolled dough that is cooked briefly on a convex griddle known as saj.[1]

Qutab
Azerbaijani dish: Kükü and Gutab
CourseMain course
Place of originAzerbaijan
Serving temperatureHot
Main ingredientsBeef, leek, pumpkin
VariationsYashyl Qutab (Green Qutab), Qutab with pumpkin, Qarın qutabı, Shamakhy Qutab, Corat Qutab, Dəvə Qutab

Composition

When the weather gets warmer, the number of dishes made from wild plants increases.[2] Qutab belongs to ancient Azerbaijani cuisine and later on, it was popular in South Caucasian and Jewish cuisine as well. Qutab is made by creating a stiff dough from flour, water, eggs, and salt. The dough is rolled into a thin circular layer and the middle of each circle filled with stuffing before finally being folded into a crescent shape. The resulting patties are griddled on both sides and served by pouring over butter on top. Qutab is usually served with yoghurt with green coriander, fennel and sumac.[3]

Variations

There are many variations of qutab: usually, pumpkin and greens are used as fillings.[4] There are also Shamakhy qutab, Yashyl Qutab and Qarın qutabı, quzu qutabı (lamb), deve qutabi specific for Jorat settlement. They are regional variations of qutab in Azerbaijan.[5]

gollark: But you could actually embed hidden data in them for... purposes?
gollark: No, it just uses perceptual hashes or something to compare memes.
gollark: You would have to have people actually *add* data to see who it went through, though, and it might be hard to make it resist compression and cropping.
gollark: Oh, I just had a fun idea, steganographic data embedded in memes to trace meme flow across the internet?
gollark: I mean, they're memes, you don't need sources.

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.