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S/O Sephardi foods



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amother
OP  


 

Post Wed, Mar 06 2024, 2:04 pm
So many of you said that the Sephardi food is your favorite part of being Sephardi. I love Sephardi foods just don’t make it often.
Can you drop your favorite foods and recipes in here?

Can’t wait to try them all!
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amother
Pearl


 

Post Wed, Mar 06 2024, 4:05 pm
We love Mezze. Any recipes?
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amother
Anemone  


 

Post Wed, Mar 06 2024, 5:50 pm
What kind of Sephardi are you OP?

I grew up Ashkenaz and married a Moroccan guy. The food is so fun! I've learned a lot.
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amother
  OP


 

Post Wed, Mar 06 2024, 5:56 pm
amother Anemone wrote:
What kind of Sephardi are you OP?

I grew up Ashkenaz and married a Moroccan guy. The food is so fun! I've learned a lot.


I am very much ashkenaz, just realized I didn’t mention it in my OP
I used to eat Sephardi foods all time in seminary, and I wish I can create that in my home just don’t know where to start
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amother
  Anemone


 

Post Wed, Mar 06 2024, 6:12 pm
amother OP wrote:
I am very much ashkenaz, just realized I didn’t mention it in my OP
I used to eat Sephardi foods all time in seminary, and I wish I can create that in my home just don’t know where to start


When I get a few minutes, I hope to come back here with some recipes to share Smile
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amother
Hosta  


 

Post Wed, Mar 06 2024, 6:32 pm
amother Anemone wrote:
What kind of Sephardi are you OP?

I grew up Ashkenaz and married a Moroccan guy. The food is so fun! I've learned a lot.


Important question!!

My friend was seriously dating a sephardi guy, Persian. She went and bought a bunch of "sephardic" food from a local grocery store to impress him. It was all Syrian or Lebanese or whatever and he literally hadn't in his life heard of any of it. She thought he was pulling her leg when he was baffled and when he didn't like the super hot spicy stuff.
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amother
Eggshell  


 

Post Wed, Mar 06 2024, 7:43 pm
I love Lebanese kofta and mujaddara, Syrian lachmajin, arayes and kibbeh, Yemenite hawaij soup, Moroccan fish, Turkish shwarma, Persian dolmeh grape leaves, salad, laffa, and many more.
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amother
Lightblue


 

Post Wed, Mar 06 2024, 7:54 pm
amother Hosta wrote:
Important question!!

My friend was seriously dating a sephardi guy, Persian. She went and bought a bunch of "sephardic" food from a local grocery store to impress him. It was all Syrian or Lebanese or whatever and he literally hadn't in his life heard of any of it. She thought he was pulling her leg when he was baffled and when he didn't like the super hot spicy stuff.


Sorry, but most Syrian/Lebanese, don't use "hot spicy stuff" Our food is spiced just not burning mouth spices. Most common spices are Allspice, Cumin, & Cinnamon or hard to find Aleppo Pepper" My family doesn't use the Red pepper flakes. I associate hot and spicy with Mexican or Indian food.
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amother
Smokey


 

Post Wed, Mar 06 2024, 9:24 pm
Some of our favorites are
Morocan salmon
Bukharian ploff
Syrian mazza
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amother
  Hosta


 

Post Wed, Mar 06 2024, 9:55 pm
amother Lightblue wrote:
Sorry, but most Syrian/Lebanese, don't use "hot spicy stuff" Our food is spiced just not burning mouth spices. Most common spices are Allspice, Cumin, & Cinnamon or hard to find Aleppo Pepper" My family doesn't use the Red pepper flakes. I associate hot and spicy with Mexican or Indian food.


I literally have no idea and I seem to have offended you. I'm as Ashkenaz as they come lol and was just sharing what a friend told me. Maybe she picked up spicy versions, or maybe just for his palette they were too spiced but not spicy. Idk but it's certainly not personal.

Sidenote...She did actually end up married to the boy ... Maybe they bonded over a shared dislike of the foods she bought that they tried?

My point just was that different types of sephardi apparently have different foods, and there's might not be much crossover.
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amother
Blueberry


 

Post Wed, Mar 06 2024, 10:01 pm
Persian food actually features tons of veggies- dill, parsley- lots of dried lemon
It's unbelievably delicious stews with meatballs or meat cubes served over rice with crispy potatoes on the bottom.
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amother
  Eggshell


 

Post Wed, Mar 06 2024, 10:07 pm
amother Blueberry wrote:
Persian food actually features tons of veggies- dill, parsley- lots of dried lemon
It's unbelievably delicious stews with meatballs or meat cubes served over rice with crispy potatoes on the bottom.

Please post recipes for the meatball stew, and the meat cube stew served over rice with crispy potatoes on bottom!
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Bnei Berak 10  




 
 
    
 

Post Wed, Mar 06 2024, 11:36 pm
Impossible to lump sefardi foods together. Persian and Moroccan cuisine for example are very different.
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amother
Hydrangea


 

Post Thu, Mar 07 2024, 5:39 am
amother Lightblue wrote:
Sorry, but most Syrian/Lebanese, don't use "hot spicy stuff" Our food is spiced just not burning mouth spices. Most common spices are Allspice, Cumin, & Cinnamon or hard to find Aleppo Pepper" My family doesn't use the Red pepper flakes. I associate hot and spicy with Mexican or Indian food.

I think they call it spicy instead of well seasoned ( the vinegar they use in some dishes is burning.... stuffed vegetables with tomato sauce full of vinegar...)
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  Bnei Berak 10




 
 
    
 

Post Thu, Mar 07 2024, 5:52 am
amother Hydrangea wrote:
I think they call it spicy instead of well seasoned ( the vinegar they use in some dishes is burning.... stuffed vegetables with tomato sauce full of vinegar...)

Vinegar? I've never seen vinegar in sefardi food. Thought it's ashkenazi cuisine.
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hodeez




 
 
    
 

Post Thu, Mar 07 2024, 5:58 am
Bukharian cuisine is rice and meat heavy. Worth the clogged arteries
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