List of Israeli dishes

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The following is a list of Israeli dishes. For the cuisine, see Israeli cuisine.

Main dishes[]

St. Peter's fish (tilapia) in a restaurant in Tiberias, Israel
Hamin

Meat[]

  • Jerusalem mixed grill—originating in Jerusalem,[1] a mixed grill of chicken hearts, spleens and liver mixed with bits of lamb cooked on a flat grill, seasoned with a spice blend and served with rice, mujaddara or bamia
  • Kubba seleqstew or soup made of beet
  • Mergueza spicy sausage originating in North Africa, mainly eaten grilled in Israel
  • Moussakaoven-baked layered ground-meat and eggplant casserole
  • Schnitzelfried chicken breast with breadcrumb or spice-flavored flour coating
  • Shashlikskewered and grilled cubes of meat
  • Skewered goose liver—flavored with spices

Fish[]

Gefilte fish topped with slices of carrot
  • Denessein the coastal region, baked with yogurt, tomatoes, garlic, dried mint and cucumbers; also prepared fried
  • Gefilte fish—traditional Ashkenazi Jewish quenelles made of carp, whitefish, or pike, typically eaten as an appetizer
  • TilapiaSt. Peter's fish, eaten in Israel and especially in Tiberias fried or baked with spices

Vegetarian[]

Ptitim
  • Brik—thin pastry around a filling, commonly deep fried
  • Burgul—wheat, cooked in many ways
  • Hamin—long-cooked Shabbat stews made with a variety of meats, grains and root vegetables
  • Jakhnun—pastry served on Shabbat morning with fresh grated tomato and skhug, eaten for breakfast especially on Shabbat
  • Khachapuri—bread filled with eggs and cheese
  • Kishka—stuffed derma, typically cooked in Shabbat stews
  • Ktzitzot Khubeza—a patty made of mallow, bulgur/bread crumbs, eggs, onion, olive oil
  • Kubba bamia—dumplings made of semolina or rice and okra cooked in a tomato stew or soup
  • Macaroni Hamin—a traditional Sephardic Jerusalemite dish, originally from the Jewish Quarter of the Old City of Jerusalem
  • Malawach—bread eaten with fresh grated tomato and skhug
  • Orez Shu'it—white beans cooked in a tomato stew and served on rice
  • Ptitim—toasted pasta shaped like rice grains[2]
  • Ziva—puff pastry topped with sesame seeds and filled with cheese and olives

Soups[]

Soup with matzah balls
  • Maraq 'Adashim—lentil soup cooked with tomato sauce
  • Maraq Shuit—white-bean soup cooked with tomato sauce
  • Matzah ball—dropped into a pot of salted boiling water or chicken soup, a staple food on Passover.
  • Shkedei maraksmall yellow squares made from flour and palm oil.

Meze[]

Bourekas served with Israeli salad, olives and feta cheese
  • Bourekasphyllo or puff pastry filled with vegetables, cheese, meat, spices, herbs, nuts, pickles, etc. (comes from börek)
  • Kreplach—small dumplings filled with ground meat, mashed potatoes or another filling, usually boiled and served in chicken soup, though they may also be served fried.

Salads and dips[]

Salat ḥatzilim b'mayonnaise
  • Cabbage salad
  • Carrot salad
  • Coleslaw
  • Greek salad
  • Hamusim—vegetables pickled in a pot, such as cucumber and cabbage, eggplant, carrot, turnip, radish, onion, caper, lemon, olives, cauliflower, tomatoes, chili, bell pepper, garlic and beans
  • Israeli salad—made with tomatoes, cucumbers, onions, parsley
  • Matbucha—cooked dish of tomatoes and roasted bell peppers seasoned with garlic and chili pepper
  • Salat avocado—rural salad made of avocados, with lemon juice and chopped scallions
  • Salat ḥatzilim b'mayonnaise—contains fried eggplant, mayonnaise, garlic
  • Sabich salad—rural salad dish, the ingredients are almost the same as in sabich itself without the hummus and pita bread

Cheeses and yogurts[]

Safed cheese (Tzfat)
  • Cottage cheese
  • Circassian cheese—a mild cheese that does not melt when baked or fried, and can be crumbled
  • Feta cheese
  • Gvina levana—Israeli quark cheese, sold in different fat content variations (1-2%, 3%, 5% and 9%)
  • Milky—yogurt with chocolate pudding, vanilla whipped-cream and other variations
  • Sirene—a type of brined cheese made in the Balkans
  • Tzfat cheese—semi-hard salty sheep milk cheese

Spices and condiments[]

Skhug
  • Ras el hanout—used in many savory dishes, sometimes rubbed on meat or fish, or stirred into couscous, pasta or rice
  • Sumac—dried fruits are ground to produce a tangy, crimson spice
  • Hawaij—a variety of Yemeni ground spice mixtures
  • Filfel chuma—a chili-garlic paste similar to a hot sauce originating from Libyan Jews
  • Skhug—the hot sauce of choice in the Middle East, made from chili peppers, cilantro, and various spices, red or green, depending on the color of the chilis
  • Amba—tangy mango pickle condiment of Iraqi-Jewish and Kurdish-Jewish origin

Breads[]

Breads[]

Challah and bagels in Mahane Yehuda Market
  • Bagel—a ring of yeasted wheat dough, roughly hand-sized, first boiled for a short time in water and then baked
  • Challah—a special bread of Eastern-European origin in Ashkenazi Jewish cuisine, usually braided
  • Kubaneh—traditional Yemenite Jewish bread similar to monkey bread
  • Malawach—thin layers of puff pastry brushed with oil or fat and cooked flat in a frying pan
  • Matzah—an unleavened flatbread
  • Mofletta—a thin crêpe made from water, flour and oil
  • Sliced bread—less common today

Bread dishes[]

  • Bagel toast
  • Falafel in pita–Israeli pita stuffed with falafel balls and Israeli salad[3]
  • Havita b'laffa—omelette in taboon bread, served with hummus or labneh
  • Jerusalem mixed grill—can be served in pita or laffa
  • Lahmacun—round, thin piece of dough topped with minced meat (most commonly beef and lamb) and minced vegetables and herbs including onions, tomatoes and parsley, then baked
  • Sabich—served in pita, traditionally containing fried eggplant, hard-boiled eggs, hummus, tahini, Israeli salad, potato, parsley and amba. Traditionally it is made with haminados eggs. Sometimes it is doused with hot sauce and sprinkled with minced onion
  • Tunisian sandwich—warm sandwich with tuna, hard-boiled egg, potato, harissa and olives

Snacks[]

Bamba
Grill-flavored Bissli
  • Bamba—a peanut-butter-flavored snack
  • Bissli—popular flavors are "Grill" and "Barbecue", others include onion, smoky, pizza, falafel, Mexican, and hamburger
  • Bourekas—a popular baked pastry
  • Cow Chocolate—a brand of chocolate products
  • Frikandel—a sort of minced-meat hot dog
  • Klik—various chocolate, candy, and chocolate-covered products, including chocolate-covered corn flakes and malted milk balls
  • Krembo—a chocolate-coated marshmallow treat
  • Mekupelet—a bar of thinly folded milk chocolate
  • Pannekoek special—pancake or crêpe filled with Nutella chocolate spread and banana
  • Pesek Zman—brand of chocolate bar
  • Sufganiyah—a round jelly doughnut
  • Sfenj—a light, spongy ring of dough fried in oil, eaten plain, sprinkled with sugar, or soaked in honey
  • Tortit—a wafer coated with chocolate containing rum-like almond cream

Sweets and desserts[]

Rugelach
  • FazuelosSephardic pastries of thin fried dough
  • Hamantash—an Ashkenazi triangular filled-pocket cookie
  • Ice cream—ice creams, ice pops, and sorbets come in many flavors including halva, hummus, Bamba, arak, watermelon, sirene, labane, and za'atar
  • Krantz cake—variations include one filled with chocolate and raspberry jam, another soaked in honey syrup
  • Kugel—a baked pudding or casserole, most commonly made from egg noodles
  • Lahoh—a spongy, pancake-like bread originating from Somalia and the Horn of Africa
  • Lekach—a honey-sweetened cake
  • LevivotHanukah latkes (potato pancakes)
  • Pannekoek special—pancake or crêpe filled with Nutella chocolate spread and banana
  • Rugelach—a triangle of dough around a filling
  • Silan—date honey
  • Watermelon with sirene or safed cheese, and sometimes mint leaves

Beverages[]

Limonana
  • Apricot juice
  • Arak—Anise-flavored alcoholic beverage, sometimes flavored with grapefruit or khat juices instead of water
  • Beer
  • Gat—A juice made of khat, in Jerusalem it is mixed with citron and named Etrogat
  • Limonana—type of lemonade made from freshly-squeezed lemon juice and mint leaves
  • Orange juice
  • Pomegranate juice
  • Pomegranate wine
  • Shoko Bsakit—chocolate milk in a bag
  • Sugarcane juice
  • Tea—sometimes flavored with rosewater, mint, lemon juice, honey or date honey
  • Turkish coffee
  • Vodka—distilled beverage composed primarily of water and ethanol, sometimes with traces of impurities and flavorings
  • Wine

Other[]

See also[]

  • Israeli cuisine
  • Kosher restaurant
  • Middle Eastern cuisine
  • Strauss-Elite
  • Osem (company)

References[]

  1. ^ Ottolenghi, Y.; Tamimi, S. (2012). Jerusalem: A Cookbook. Potter/TenSpeed/Harmony. p. 326. ISBN 978-1-60774-395-8. Retrieved May 4, 2017.
  2. ^ Gaunt, Doram (May 9, 2008). "Ben-Gurion's rice". Haaretz. Retrieved 19 August 2014.
  3. ^ "A Brief History of Falafel in Israel".
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