Camp's Food
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Food Menu :
Meat:
1- Shewa 2- Mashakeek 3- Lamb Saloona 4- Fried meat 5- Fish 6- Chicken 7- Ewal ( dried fish )
Rice :
1- Harees 2- White rice 3- Makboos 4- Baryani
Bread:
1- Omani bread 2- Gewaweel bread 3- Qeram bread
Different Meal:
1- Mesanof 2- Thareed 3- Salad
Some information
about Omani Food: More substantial meals often have rice as the main ingredient, together with cooked meats. The main daily meal is usually eaten at midday, while the evening meal is lighter. Maqbous is a rice dish, tinged yellow with saffron and cooked over a spicy red or white meat. Aursia is a festival meal, served during celebrations, which consists of mashed rice flavoured with spices. Another popular festival meal is shuwa, which is meat cooked very slowly (sometimes for up to two days) in an underground clay oven. The meat becomes extremely tender and it is impregnated with spices and herbs before cooking to give it a very distinct taste. Fish is often used in main dishes too, and the kingfish is a popular ingredient. Mashuai is a meal comprising whole spit-roasted kingfish served with lemon rice. The rukhal bread is a thin, round bread originally baked over a fire made from palm leaves. It is eaten at any meal, typically served with Omani honey for breakfast or crumbled over curry for dinner. It is fairly simple, but by using various marinades and impregnating meat with spices, the result is a mouth-watering concoction which stimulates the tastebuds. Chicken, fish and mutton are regularly used in dishes. A favourite drink is laban, a salty buttermilk. Yoghurt drinks, flavoured with cardamom and pistachio nuts are also very popular.
Although
spices, herbs, onion, garlic and lime
are liberally used in traditional Omani
cuisine, unlike similar Asian food, it
is not hot. Omani cuisine is also
distinct from the indigenous foods of
other Gulf states and even varies within
the Sultanate's different regions. The
differences between some of the dishes
prepared in Salalah, in the south, and
those prepared in Muscat, in the north,
are so market that it is difficult to
find anything common between them.
However, one delight that remains a
symbol of Omani hospitality throughout
the country are the ubiquitous dates,
served with khawa, or
Omani coffee. Khawa is
prepared from freshly roasted ground
coffee mixed with cardamom powder.
The method
of preparing shuwa is
elaborate. The meat is marinated with
red pepper, turmeric, coriander, cumin,
cardamom, garlic and vinegar and then
wrapped in sacks made of dry banana or
palm leaves. These sacks are then thrown
into the smoldering oven, which is
covered with a lid and sealed so that no
smoke escapes. In some villages, the
meat is cooked for 24 hours while in
others it is believed that meat tastes
better after 48 hours. Omani Halwa
Omani halwa (sweet) is famous at home
and abroad as a symbol of traditional
Omani hospitality. It . |