"The Arabic Juve Thread... Reloaded!!" (2 Viewers)

ReBeL

The Jackal
Jan 14, 2005
22,871
what do the say about the saudi Kabsa ... lol ... i hate it ...

about msakhan that is what i call good food ...

I would really try this kibbe nayye .. maybe lahme nayye once .. just to try it out :)
The Kabsa is good, but it becomes boring if you eat it everyday:D

During my childhood in Saudi Arabia, I liked Mandi more...

I appreciated the first creative guy that thought of making it:D
 

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Rami

The Linuxologist
Dec 24, 2004
8,065
what do the say about the saudi Kabsa ... lol ... i hate it ...

about msakhan that is what i call good food ...

I would really try this kibbe nayye .. maybe lahme nayye once .. just to try it out :)
About Kabsa, you should ask Swag, I reckon his wife cooked it for him once :p
 

Bisco

Senior Member
Nov 21, 2005
14,378
:eyebrows: :flirt:
horny bastard :D ( joking)

good pics rebel!!! where is juventus710? no wonder he was busy watching the gulf cup :disagree: and went running in the masera celebrating the cup victory for emirates. did u get a chick nabil?!?!? in other words will we be getting free airline tickets to abu dahbi + full board reservations in sheraton to attend yr wedding anytime soon ;)
 

Bisco

Senior Member
Nov 21, 2005
14,378
where is everyone?? i am shit bored and i'm in the slowest car service ever waiting for my best friend to finish his car service. apparently his gear box whet crazy so i am in for along boring day. luckily they have two computers with dsl so thats a bright side to the day.

@ rami mandi is out of this world!! there is mathbeee but i honestly dont know whats the difference between mandi and mathbee as i have'nt tried the last one.
 

ReBeL

The Jackal
Jan 14, 2005
22,871
So tell me.. for those of you who understand and can read or speak arab, is reading the Koran is like reading a storybook ? I hear the arab language in the Koran is more complicated, if so, how ?

Well. Thank god for Mr. Jabir for creating kasrah and fathah. Makes reading the Koran much easier for us non speakers :D
Who is Mr. Jabir??:D
 

Bisco

Senior Member
Nov 21, 2005
14,378
is that another way to say get a life!!! :D

i wish i had a job but unfortunetly i dont as i'm still fighting my battle with pharmacy. i was hoping it would be just an hour but i still have 3 more hours till the car is fixed. renault dealership is quite good but they r just toooo slow.

mark how the hell do u manage tog et online dont u work mate? ive seen maresca for example he can barely stay online if its at work or else he might get into trouble with his boss. :smoke:
 

ReBeL

The Jackal
Jan 14, 2005
22,871
where is everyone?? i am shit bored and i'm in the slowest car service ever waiting for my best friend to finish his car service. apparently his gear box whet crazy so i am in for along boring day. luckily they have two computers with dsl so thats a bright side to the day.

@ rami mandi is out of this world!! there is mathbeee but i honestly dont know whats the difference between mandi and mathbee as i have'nt tried the last one.
Saudi Arabian Foods


The Saudi Kingdom is well known for its variety of traditional dishes that reflect the diversity of the regions and the custom of the people. Most of the dishes contain meat, rice, wheat, vegetables and spices that give these recipes a special flavor. One of Saudi Arabia's most famous dishes is Al-Kabsa. Al-Kabsa is made of rice cooked with red or white meat or chicken in a pot. A variety of spices and salads can be added to the dish. Al-Kabsa is considered a staple dish throughout the Kingdom.

Meat is cooked in various ways. A popular way of preparing meat is called Al-Mandi. This utilizes ancient techniques of cooking, first employed when man discovered fire. A lamb or chicken, prepared with rice, spices and water is barbecued in a deep hole in the ground that is covered while the meat cooks.

Another unique Saudi Arabian way of preparing and serving meat is Mathbi. Al-Mathbi involves grilling seasoned lamb or chicken on flat stones that are placed on top of burning embers
.

There are many other popular dishes in the Saudi Kingdom like Jarish. Jarish is prepared by cooking wheat with Laban (sour milk) or milk and adding spices to it. Jarish may be simply boiled and served with a topping of chopped hot pepper and onion, or it may be browned in butter or oil and then cooked into a sort of pilaf with chunks of meat, chopped onion and tomato for the richly flavored dish called mufallaq.

Qursan is another dish which consists of dried thin wheat loafs which are saturated with gravy and cooked in a special way.

Saliq / Selek (lamb with milk and rice), is a simple, bland dish, the best known of all the rice dishes in Saudi Arabian cooking. It's almost like a hot rice pudding, the rice first half-cooked in meat or chicken broth and then with milk, stirred and simmered for about an hour until soft.

Another popular meal which is called Mathlutha is created by combining rice and Jarish. Mathlutha is usually served with red meat or with chicken and is cooked in either the Al- Mathbi or Mandi style.

Saleeg is another dish made by cooking rice with milk until the mixture becomes solid. It is then served in a bowl with butter sprinkled on top of it and poached meat. Different kinds of gravy, cooked with vegetables and meat, are also common in the Kingdom

The coastal areas are famous for seafood and rice dishes. Al-Sayadiah is an example of such a dish. It consists of fish cooked with rice and onions.

Local food is often strongly flavored and spicy. The staple diet is kubez bread (flat, unleavened bread) which accompanies every dish.

Aysh abu laham is described as "something like pizza." The Suadi Arabian spon on the Italian classic, it starts with leavened dough, egg-rich and flavored with seeds of fennel, and black caraway. This is baked in the shape of a thick-bottomed pie shell, then filled with fried mutton, chopped kurrath or spring onion, and topped with a sauce made from tahinah.

Rice, lentils, chick peas (hummus) and cracked wheat (burghul) are also common. The most common meats are lamb and chicken. Beef is rare and pork is proscribed under Islamic law. The main meat meal of the day is lunch, either kultra (meat on skewers) or kebabs served with soup, salad, bread, rice, tomatoes, onions and other vegetables. Arabic cakes, cream desserts and rice pudding (muhalabia) also feature in the diet.

Mezzeh may include up to 40 dishes. Foreign cooking is offered in larger towns and the whole range of international cuisine, including fast food, is available in the oil-producing Eastern Province and in Jeddah. Restaurants have table service.

Other regional favorites are kubbat maraq- balls of rice spiced with turmeric, pepper, cumin and dried lime are shaped around a center of fried ground meat, onion and parsley and set to simmer in a sauce flavored with tomato; and fi qa'atah - a three-layered dish served as rice on the bottom, meat in the middle and almonds on top. It's cooked, in fact, top side down, for the name literally means "at the bottom."

During a Saudi Arabian feast it would be most likely to eat the luxurious kharuf mahshi, baby lamb stuffed with rice, nuts and raisins, rubbed outside with a paste of onion crushed with cinnamon, cloves and cardamom and browned all over in bubbling sawn, clarified cow or goat butter, before roasting.-
 

Marc

Softcore Juventino
Jul 14, 2006
21,649
is that another way to say get a life!!! :D

i wish i had a job but unfortunetly i dont as i'm still fighting my battle with pharmacy. i was hoping it would be just an hour but i still have 3 more hours till the car is fixed. renault dealership is quite good but they r just toooo slow.

mark how the hell do u manage tog et online dont u work mate? ive seen maresca for example he can barely stay online if its at work or else he might get into trouble with his boss. :smoke:
Let´s just say I have a good job. :D Small amount of work and a fine paycheck.

I´m usually online from 8:00 - 16:00 CET (I presume you noticed that :D) so I post all the time I can, since I cannot log-in to the forums from my home.

I have to be careful in the future though, my boss saw me chating and he wasn´t too pleased with that :groan:

Anyway, I hope you finish your studying very soon, so you can find a job and post all the time you can :D ..... and get paid for that :p
 

Rami

The Linuxologist
Dec 24, 2004
8,065
Saudi Arabian Foods


The Saudi Kingdom is well known for its variety of traditional dishes that reflect the diversity of the regions and the custom of the people. Most of the dishes contain meat, rice, wheat, vegetables and spices that give these recipes a special flavor. One of Saudi Arabia's most famous dishes is Al-Kabsa. Al-Kabsa is made of rice cooked with red or white meat or chicken in a pot. A variety of spices and salads can be added to the dish. Al-Kabsa is considered a staple dish throughout the Kingdom.

Meat is cooked in various ways. A popular way of preparing meat is called Al-Mandi. This utilizes ancient techniques of cooking, first employed when man discovered fire. A lamb or chicken, prepared with rice, spices and water is barbecued in a deep hole in the ground that is covered while the meat cooks.

Another unique Saudi Arabian way of preparing and serving meat is Mathbi. Al-Mathbi involves grilling seasoned lamb or chicken on flat stones that are placed on top of burning embers
.

There are many other popular dishes in the Saudi Kingdom like Jarish. Jarish is prepared by cooking wheat with Laban (sour milk) or milk and adding spices to it. Jarish may be simply boiled and served with a topping of chopped hot pepper and onion, or it may be browned in butter or oil and then cooked into a sort of pilaf with chunks of meat, chopped onion and tomato for the richly flavored dish called mufallaq.

Qursan is another dish which consists of dried thin wheat loafs which are saturated with gravy and cooked in a special way.

Saliq / Selek (lamb with milk and rice), is a simple, bland dish, the best known of all the rice dishes in Saudi Arabian cooking. It's almost like a hot rice pudding, the rice first half-cooked in meat or chicken broth and then with milk, stirred and simmered for about an hour until soft.

Another popular meal which is called Mathlutha is created by combining rice and Jarish. Mathlutha is usually served with red meat or with chicken and is cooked in either the Al- Mathbi or Mandi style.

Saleeg is another dish made by cooking rice with milk until the mixture becomes solid. It is then served in a bowl with butter sprinkled on top of it and poached meat. Different kinds of gravy, cooked with vegetables and meat, are also common in the Kingdom

The coastal areas are famous for seafood and rice dishes. Al-Sayadiah is an example of such a dish. It consists of fish cooked with rice and onions.

Local food is often strongly flavored and spicy. The staple diet is kubez bread (flat, unleavened bread) which accompanies every dish.

Aysh abu laham is described as "something like pizza." The Suadi Arabian spon on the Italian classic, it starts with leavened dough, egg-rich and flavored with seeds of fennel, and black caraway. This is baked in the shape of a thick-bottomed pie shell, then filled with fried mutton, chopped kurrath or spring onion, and topped with a sauce made from tahinah.

Rice, lentils, chick peas (hummus) and cracked wheat (burghul) are also common. The most common meats are lamb and chicken. Beef is rare and pork is proscribed under Islamic law. The main meat meal of the day is lunch, either kultra (meat on skewers) or kebabs served with soup, salad, bread, rice, tomatoes, onions and other vegetables. Arabic cakes, cream desserts and rice pudding (muhalabia) also feature in the diet.

Mezzeh may include up to 40 dishes. Foreign cooking is offered in larger towns and the whole range of international cuisine, including fast food, is available in the oil-producing Eastern Province and in Jeddah. Restaurants have table service.

Other regional favorites are kubbat maraq- balls of rice spiced with turmeric, pepper, cumin and dried lime are shaped around a center of fried ground meat, onion and parsley and set to simmer in a sauce flavored with tomato; and fi qa'atah - a three-layered dish served as rice on the bottom, meat in the middle and almonds on top. It's cooked, in fact, top side down, for the name literally means "at the bottom."

During a Saudi Arabian feast it would be most likely to eat the luxurious kharuf mahshi, baby lamb stuffed with rice, nuts and raisins, rubbed outside with a paste of onion crushed with cinnamon, cloves and cardamom and browned all over in bubbling sawn, clarified cow or goat butter, before roasting.-
I respect a man who knows the power of google ;)....there you go Bisco, Rebel gave it to you :)
 

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