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FOOD
&
DRINKS
Standards
of food hygiene are mostly satisfactory in all categories of
eating- houses, particularly the Iranian sausages, some of
the best types of which no longer cause stomach problems. In
general most Iranian cooking is healthy and nutritious, and
you shouldn't have much problem in keeping to a balanced
diet. At street stalls it is advisable only to eat hot food
that you have watched being cooked. AI.J provinces of Iran
have their own dishes and specialties. However, the national
dish is rice prepared in several special ways and served in
vast helpings with almost every main dish, and very few of
the main dishes would be considered complete without it.
Iranian rice from the rainy plains of Mazandaran and Guilan
is considered by many -not only Iranians -to be one of the
world's best, but much of the rice sold in the country today
is imported.
Chelo is rice prepared in several
stages over 24 hours, boiled and steamed and served
separately, while polo is rice cooked with the other
ingredients. Rice in general is called berenj. The
rice is always fluffy and tender, never sticky and soggy.
Often the cook will steam chelo rice with yogurt or an egg
yolk (or a thin layer of lavash bread) to make a
crunchy golden crust (!ah dig) at the bottom of the
pan, which is broken up and served on top of the rest of the
rice. Saffron is very frequently used to flavor and color
rice.
Soft drinks are sold in bottles. Tea served in see-through
glasses (never with milk) is an integral part of hospitality
in Iran. Coffee is not widely available and is usually
expensive.
Fruits are served almost at all kinds of ceremonies and
occasions. Second to tea, seasonal fruits are another
integral part of hospitality.
Every province has its own specialty for making sweets,
biscuits and candies. Sweets made of dates, rice and many
other fruits and substances are very common in Iran and
people appreciate good sweets and tourists during their stay
in Iran would develop a taste for quality of sweets and
would soon recognize the origin of each one. Traditionally
Iranians drink cold water with their meals. The following is
a brief description of a number of the most delicious and
thebest-known Iranian foods, which you might want to try
while touring in Iran:
Abgusht, Lamb Stew
Ash, an Iranian thick soup
Chelo kabab
Polo and Chelo, (Rice)
Kuku
Kufteh Tabrizi
Khoresht,
Dolmeh Barg
Desserts
Mast, (Yogurt)
Iranian Bread |
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