Food and Recipes Najat Habash
Bread Making Most if not all Bakhdida women excelled in home made bread. Many kinds of bread are made, leavened and unleavened. For the unleavened bread large amounts of wheat flour is sieved first as shown in the picture above then kneaded in to a fine, smooth, and easy to roll dough, Few ladies share the making of the bread; dough is shaped in to small portions.
The first lady (or a little girl is usually given this chore) rolls the portion of dough while sitting around a board made of wood or a more traditional stone board locally known FARSHA using a thick roller GAROMA with a special motion until the dough gets flatter, then it is flipped to the next lady who uses a thin rolling pin locally known GIRA to continue the process of thinning the loaf of bread until it is as thin as the writing paper as shown in the pictures above and below.
The round loaves are collected on a wooden board known TABAK until a good number is collected to be ready for baking. The third lady gets the mud oven ready for baking by using hey and sawdust. The uncooked loaves are slapped on the hot walls of the oven by using special tool known MANZAK; cooked loaves are left flat or folded in to four layers for easier handling and storing. This kind of bread can be stored for about two to three weeks and can be eaten as it is or by sprinkling it with water to soften it.
More sophisticated bread is prepared by brushing oil on the unleavened thin bread and folded it in to many layers to form a thick loaf that is topped with cheese.
Leavened bread is prepared by using mostly dry yeast for fermentation. This kind of bread is thicker and softer than the thin bread, sesame seeds are sprinkled on top of it for flavor and decoration, warm water is used for kneading.
Oil is used while kneading for preparing another kind of leavened bread which is thick and topped with cheese or sesame seeds and brushed with plain yogurt for shining. This kind of bread is very similar to the modern pizza. A very special treat is prepared by using- GURGUR -or as it is known for the west people-BULGOR-other ingredients are used along with it such as meat, onions, spices and tomato paste. Meat is excluded for preparing a plain treat from BULGOR used mostly during the fasting season of lent when no meat is used for food. After the process of bread baking is over, the stew making starts, different kinds of stews are prepared over night in the hot ashes of the mud oven. The ingredients of the stew are washed and kept in a mud pot locally known BOROMTHA. Special long wooden ladle-ARTANEETHA- is used for stirring the stew during the night to prevent it from sticking on the bottom of the pot. Examples of the stews are; SHOPATEE: brown lentil with meat, salt and water HARISA: pearled wheat, meat, oil, salt and water SHORBA: chick pea, meat, onions, water and salt All Bakhdida people used mud ovens for baking their own daily bread but nowadays iron ovens are most commonly used.
Food Preservation
Before refrigeration and freezing technologies people of Bakhdida used many ways
to preserve their food stuff.
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