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Kishk.


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The quote is by Verjuice describing this dish in an unrelated topic. It really sums up all that I could come up with to describe the Mediterranean/Eastern European staple.

Searching these boards, I found no discussion of this quintessential peasant food. Really. On eGullet?

Kishk

Masquerading as haute cuisine

Kishk_1.1.jpg

Kishk in its intermediate form resembles white corn meal with a sharp, pungent aroma and looks like this

Kishk_2.jpg

While it can be prepared many ways, Kishk Soup, is the simplest and my favorite (will show others later).

In a sauce pan, slowly blanch a bunch of garlic in olive oil for ten minutes until soft and slightly blond.

Kishk_3.jpg

Add a cup of Kishk and followed by about 2 cups of cold water

Kishk_5.jpg

Stir and simmer a few minutes until the garlic is soft and your preferred consistency is reached.

Water to Kishk ratio is not critical. If its too runny, add More Kish or simmer longer.

Kishk_6.jpg

It is usually served with toasted Pita chips on top, and assorted vegetables on the side. I like potato chips instead.

Now, before you rush to buy Kish at your favorite Middle Eastern store, let me say, DON'T. All the commercial stuff (that I've tried) is really bad.

We usually bring our own or have it sent to us from Lebanon.

This time we're going to make some.

Main (only) ingredients:

Yogurt

Burghoul (Bulgar)

We start by making the yogurt, 2 gallons.

Kishk_7.jpg

To be continued...

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Wow. This is really intriguing.

So I'm not going to buy my kishk. Any particular brand of bulghar to buy? I hope I'm not milling my own.

I don't understand why rappers have to hunch over while they stomp around the stage hollering.  It hurts my back to watch them. On the other hand, I've been thinking that perhaps I should start a rap group here at the Old Folks' Home.  Most of us already walk like that.

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It's delicious! I am seething with jealousy at the thought of chefcrash sprinkling this over his own home made saj (made using his home made saj oven) yum, yum, yum!

"Experience is something you gain just after you needed it" ....A Wise man

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Wow. This is really intriguing.

So I'm not going to buy my kishk. Any particular brand of bulghar to buy? I hope I'm not milling my own.

ld like to try local kishk

Ill ask

there are several small middle eastern markets not far from me.

I get all the bulgur there

find a M.E. place near your

get the bulgur by ##: how fine or coarse it is.

I tried two commercial brands. One was Albanian and the other was Lebanese. They both came in glass jars. One used evaporated milk, the other dried milk. Both were too powdery. Neither smelled or tasted like the one I'm used to.

If you find a store that sells it in bulk, then buy a small amount and try it. If you have middle Eastern friends, ask them where they buy theirs.

Bulgar coarseness is not critical. My mother tells me that after sifting the cracked cooked wheat into the different gauges, the leftover larger irregular grade was used for Kishk, since it was going to be milled anyway.

Milling is going to be part of the process. I'm either going to use my food processor, or buy the milling attachment for my Kitchen Aid.

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This is like Greek trahana. In fact, I googled and yes, kishk and trahana are the same. My MIL always used to talk about the trahana her mother used to make in Greece.

Is it good? It just doesn't sound appealing to me, but...

If your MIL always talked about it, it must be good:)

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Continuing on...

The yogurt was made the way we always make it. Heated 2 gallons of whole milk to 115*F and added about a cup of previously made yogurt. Mixed it all then poured it into 3 smaller containers, covered and wrapped all with a blanket. This is what they looked like the next day.

Kishk_8.jpg

Kishk has a sharp, pungent, blue-cheesy, funky, not much unlike "Shankleesh" aroma and flavor, that you're not going to get by simply mixing yogurt and bulgar.

To get that profile, the recipe calls for leaving the yogurt at room temperature for a few days to develop a tangier (more sour) flavor. We took a sample and placed it in the fridge. The sample would later be used to compare with the stuff left at room temperature to gauge sourness.

Sure enough by the fifth day the yogurt was much tangier than the refrigerated sample. But we still didn't know how sour it was supposed to get. After all it is fall and cool here Mid Michigan. Sure our kitchen is at 72*F but it feels cold, and our folks used to and still make this stuff in August and September where daytime temps. easily reach 90*F.

Luckily, we didn't have to wonder much longer. On the sixth day one of the containers developed a tiny speck of what looked like mold on the surface of the yogurt:)

Mold removed, it was time to do some combining. For the 2 gallons of yogurt we used 1 kilo of Bulgar 1/2 coarse and 1/2 fine. No reason, that's what we had. The grains were spread on to a sheet pan and place in a 200*F oven a few minutes to rid them of any moisture.

Kishk_9.jpg

While warm, the grains were combined with half the yogurt and mixed well.

The container was covered with a blanket and left out.

Kishk_10.jpg

The rest of the yogurt was strained in a strainer lined with paper towel as you would make Labneh. But we didn't strain it too long. It needed to be a little soft, because over the next two days it would have to be incorporated into the yogurt bulgar mixture.

The next day:

The Labneh (strained yogurt) was ready

Kishk_11.jpg

And this is what our mixture looked like. It had grown in volume and became stiff, the result of grains absorbing liquid. It was warm, the sign of fermentation.

Kishk_12.jpg

Now it was time to incorporate half the Labneh into the mixture. That's done by grabbing a large handful of mixture in one hand, adding a smaller handful of Labneh with the other hand, mixing them together and placing that in a clean bowl until all was incorporated. A tedious job my wife chose to do on the floor to save her arms. During this procedure we added 4 tsp of table salt to taste. It needed more but I was afraid too much salt at this point would slow down or stop the fermentation.

Kishk_13.jpg

The bowl was covered with a blanket. The next day the rest of the Labneh was incorporated and 2 more tsp of salt were added.

To be continued...

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This is like Greek trahana. In fact, I googled and yes, kishk and trahana are the same. My MIL always used to talk about the trahana her mother used to make in Greece.

Is it good? It just doesn't sound appealing to me, but...

If your MIL always talked about it, it must be good:)

But most of the things she talked about she made -- she was an excellent cook in her day. But the trahana was only talked about, never made, so I wondered if it were one of those childhood memories that are best left in memory. Apparently folks here really like it. Or maybe ME kishk is better than Greek-style?

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ChefCrash: this is great, and combines a couple of processes I've been wanting to try.

Question: you said you'd be milling the bulgur, but then I don't see a reference to that in your description above. Did you do it before placing the grains in the oven, or after they came out of the oven but before combining with the yogurt?

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This is like Greek trahana. In fact, I googled and yes, kishk and trahana are the same. My MIL always used to talk about the trahana her mother used to make in Greece.

Is it good? It just doesn't sound appealing to me, but...

If your MIL always talked about it, it must be good:)

But most of the things she talked about she made -- she was an excellent cook in her day. But the trahana was only talked about, never made, so I wondered if it were one of those childhood memories that are best left in memory. Apparently folks here really like it. Or maybe ME kishk is better than Greek-style?

The reason your MIL never made Trahana will become clear in the next 2 and last steps of making Kish.

ChefCrash: this is great, and combines a couple of processes I've been wanting to try.

Question: you said you'd be milling the bulgur, but then I don't see a reference to that in your description above. Did you do it before placing the grains in the oven, or after they came out of the oven but before combining with the yogurt?

Hi Patrick, the bulgar we mixed with yogurt was simply cracked cooked wheat the way it comes from the store. After the Kish is dried it will be milled to the consistency of corn meal. So we're not yet at that stage.

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At this point had what is called "green kishk". It's good to eat like a spread, mixed with finely diced onions, some mint (fresh or dried) and a drizzle of good olive oil.

The next step is to dehydrate the Kish. Traditionally, the Kishk is formed into golf sized balls and laid out on blankets placed on rooftops 10 to 12 hours a day in the sun for about a week.

In the evening it's gathered and brought inside til the next day.

As the Kishk dries, it has to be rubbed by hand to expose the wet insides. A very tedious chore. We're taking about several squared yards of Kishk.

In our case we used our oven in dehydrate mode set at 115*F. We laid out blobs of Kishk on 3 sheet pans lined with parchment. I was now a little depressed, we were only able to fit half of the kishk on the three pans. No ploblem. The pans were placed in the oven Wednesday (day before thanksgiving) at 2pm.

Kishk_14.jpg

Kishk_15.jpg

The next day at 7pm, the outside was fairly dry and the color of Bulgar was showing through. My wife pressed the blobs into patties to make them thinner. They went back in the oven.

Kishk_16.jpg

Friday night the Kishk was dry enough to be rubbed together to brake up the individual blobs. We noticed that Kishk on the black non-stick pan was drying faster than the other two. So we moved the kish from the black tray into the other pans and placed what was left of the green kishk in it.

Kishk_17.jpg

Today, Saturday 26th, even if the EXIF data on my photo says the 27th. I just noticed that. The dates on all my photos are off by a day. I thought I was going crazy.

Anyhow the kishk has been drying for a little over 74 hours. I think tomorrow it'll be ready for milling.

Kishk_18.jpg

To be continued...

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Wow that's truly a labor of love! I've never heard of this before, so it's really interesting to follow along. Thanks for sharing all your hard work with us.

If you ate pasta and antipasto, would you still be hungry? ~Author Unknown

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It's amazing that you are making this yoursefl Chef. Now I will have a record of it in case I ever want to try. Like you, I also get my kishik from Lebanon, made by my grandmother every year. That stuff from the store is pretty awful. I love it mostly on manaiish/fatayir (I think I posted about this a long time ago) and of course like you did, in soup form once in a while when it is cold outside.

L:ooking forward to the final result. As far as I could tell the main difference between Tarhana and Kishik is that Tarhana usually looks much coarser, almost like large couscous pebbles.

E. Nassar
Houston, TX

My Blog
contact: enassar(AT)gmail(DOT)com

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This stuff better be amazingly good for all that work. Either that or you need 9 Greek grandmothers and aunts hanging around the house happy to do it.

It does look like a lot of work. I think it might be easier for me to just pack up all my stuff and move in next door to you.

:biggrin:

I don't understand why rappers have to hunch over while they stomp around the stage hollering.  It hurts my back to watch them. On the other hand, I've been thinking that perhaps I should start a rap group here at the Old Folks' Home.  Most of us already walk like that.

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dont get me wrong Ive enjoyed this thread:

but is the stuff: bulgar + yogurt .... steeped .... dried?

love to try some!

More like bulgar + yogurt .... steeped .... Fermented which adds a ton of complex flavor... dried...milled

E. Nassar
Houston, TX

My Blog
contact: enassar(AT)gmail(DOT)com

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http://www.saudiaramcoworld.com/issue/201106/gaza.s.food.heritage.htm

Coincidence? I don't know. But the new issue of Saudi Aramco World has an article on the old foods of Gaza, and there was Kishk. Two references in one day. If you don't want to read the whole article (I thought it was very interesting) look for the Kishk under the picture of the stew, and another picture of an old lady holding a ball of it. An interesting product and procedr for sure.

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