Showing posts with label Kushary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kushary. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 18, 2017

Kushary

Among the inexplicable amalgam of sights, smells, and sounds that are modern Cairo is the extraordinarily simple taste of a workingman’s lunch called Kushary.

Hearty plate of Kushary
Kushary is sold in countless hole-in-the-wall cook shops scattered throughout the medieval warrens crowded with Cairo’s fourteen million people. Itinerant Kushary cooks also sell this rice, lentil, and macaroni dish from colourful hand-painted donkey-pulled carts throughout the working-class neighborhood of the city. Bicycles fitted with wooden boxes also crisscross the streets selling Kushary in plastic containers. However Koshari has it own fancy restaurants full of marble, brass utensils and shiny mirrors.


Kushari, also koshari (Egyptian Arabic: كشرى‎‎), is an Egyptian dish believed to be originally made in the 19th century, made of rice, macaroni and lentils mixed together, topped with a spiced tomato sauce, and garlic vinegar; garnished with chickpeas and crispy fried onions. A sprinkling of garlic juice, or garlic vinegar, and hot sauce are optional.


The first written mention of Kushary is found in the diaries of the famed Muslim traveler of the fourteenth century, Ibn Battuta. In the mid-nineteenth century the famous British traveler and translator of Thousand and One Nights, Richard Burton, identifies Kushary in “the Suez”. Given Kushary’s relationship to mujaddara, a dish with roots in the tenth century, its history may be older and more Arab  than admitted.
Serving Koshary
  
The other more plausible interpretation is that Kushary originated in the mid 19th century, during a time when Egypt was a multi-cultural country in the middle of an economic boom.

The lower classes' usually limited pantry became full with a myriad of ingredients: lentils, rice, macaroni, chickpeas, tomato sauce, onions, garlic, oil, vinegar, etc. At the end of the month, families would usually have the entire collection of ingredients as leftovers, so families would quickly finish their supply in one dish.


Serving Kushary
More sources state that the dish originated from India and Italy, in 1914 when Indians attempted to make lentil and rice Khichdi, Italians added macaroni to the dish, over time the dish has progressed and evolved into the current dish through Egyptian soldiers, then Egyptian citizens. Kushary used to be sold on food carts in it's early years, and was introduced to restaurants in later years.

Koshari is widely popular among workers and laborers. It may be prepared at home, and is also served at roadside stalls and restaurants all over Egypt; some restaurants specialize in Kushary to the exclusion of other dishes, while others feature it as one item among many. As traditionally prepared Kushary does not contain any animal products, it can be considered vegan so long as all frying uses vegetable oil.


Kushary Cart Vendor
Clifford Wright (a famous Food critic) own history with Kushary was a bit convoluted. He was determined to have some Kushary in Cairo, but was often warned away from street food by those in the know, and not unwisely. Still, he had a strong craving for a bowl of this hearty-looking dish that he saw Cairenes eating with such gusto and which was described by the distinguished professor of botany Charles B. Heiser, Jr. as a nearly perfect food for protein enrichment. Finally throwing caution to the wind, he sauntered into a cook shop that would not have met Western hygienic standards, but seemed clean enough to him relative to the countless other less clean places in Cairo. In any case, the food preparation area was clean.

    The cook and his helper, standing behind a counter, were quite delighted to see him, a Westerner, walking into their shop on the Suq al-Tafikiya half way down from the Shari’ Ramses, near the national telecommunications building, far off the beaten tourist path. The name of their place was in Arabic, Kushary Magdi and Sons.


A plate of Kushary and sauce
The Kushary plate was assembled in front of him by spooning into a bowl broken pieces of cooked spaghetti and tubetti that are kept warm in a large pan, a cross between a wok and a tub. In another large pan a mixture of cooked rice and lentils is warmed separately and then tossed on top of the pasta, about three parts rice to one part lentils, flavoured by being sautéed first in samna (clarified butter). In a third, smaller bowl are very brown, slightly crispy, and thinly sliced onions, also cooked in samna.

First the cook’s helper tosses the macaroni into the bowl with a large serving ladle, on top goes the rice and lentils with a little hot liquidly tomato sauce, dim’a musabika (thick tomato sauce cooked to perfection), and then the caramelized onions on top of that.


Clifford sat down at a rickety table to eat with a spoon and considered the two condiments on the table. One was a pitcher of chili pepper-based tomato sauce and the other was a bowl of powdered wheat bran.


He finally admitted that the Kushary was absolutely delicious --- 
a very basic staple street food that really hits the spot and he would recommend it heartily.