Top 10 foods to try in Morocco
Sample the aromatic and spicy food of North Africa by taking a
trip to Morocco, a vibrant country with strong traditions and a diverse
landscape of bustling cities, mountain ranges and arid deserts.
One of
the great cuisines of the world, Moroccan cooking abounds with subtle spices
and intriguing flavour combinations. Think tart green olives paired with
chopped preserved lemon rind stirred into a tagine of tender chicken, the
surprise of rich pigeon meat pie dusted with cinnamon and icing sugar, or
sardines coated with a flavourful combination of coriander, parsley, cumin and
a hint of chilli. Influenced by Andalusian Spain, Arabia and France, Morocco’s
cuisine is a delicious combination of mouthwatering flavours that make it
unique.
Don’t leave Morocco without trying…
B’ssara
At a
few pennies a bowl, this rich soup of dried broad beans is traditionally served
for breakfast, topped with a swirl of olive oil, a sprinkling of cumin and
bread fresh from the oven.
Tagine
A
tagine is the clay cooking pot with a conical lid that gives its name to a
myriad of dishes. Tagines can be seen bubbling away at every roadside café, are
found in top notch restaurants and in every home, and are always served with
bread.
Try
making your own chicken tagine
Fish chermoula
With
its long Atlantic and Mediterranean coasts, Morocco boasts a rich array of fish
dishes. Chermoula is a combination of herbs and spices used as a marinade
before grilling over coals, and as a dipping sauce.
Try
making your own chermoula-marinated
mackerel
Harira
During
the holy month of Ramadan, the fast is broken at sunset each day with a
steaming bowl of harira soup. Rich with tomatoes, lentils, chickpeas and lamb,
it is finished off with a squeeze of lemon juice and some chopped coriander,
and served with a sticky sweet pretzel called chebakkiya.
Try
making your own harira chicken soup
Kefta tagine
Beef or
lamb mince with garlic, fresh coriander and parsley, cinnamon and ground
coriander is rolled into balls and cooked in a tomato and onion sauce. Just
before the dish is ready, eggs are cracked into depressions in the sauce and
soon cook to perfection.
Couscous
‘Seksu’
or couscous is a fine wheat pasta traditionally rolled by hand. It is steamed
over a stew of meat and vegetables. To serve, the meat is covered by a pyramid
of couscous, the vegetables are pressed into the sides and the sauce served
separately. It is often garnished with a sweet raisin preserve, or in the
Berber tradition, with a bowl of buttermilk.
Try
cooking with couscous
Makouda
Moroccan
street food is legendary and the best place to sample the wide variety is
Djemaa el-Fna square in Marrakech. Here beside the kebabs, calamari and grilled
sardines, you will find the more unusual sweet cheek meat of sheep’s heads,
snails cooked in a spicy broth that wards off colds, and skewers of lamb’s
liver with caul fat. Makouda are little deep-fried potato balls, delicious
dipped into spicy harissa sauce.
Zaalouk
Moroccan
meals begin with at least seven cooked vegetable salads to scoop up with bread.
They can include green peppers and tomatoes, sweet carrots or courgette purée,
and a dish of local olives alongside. Zaalouk is a smoked aubergine dip,
seasoned with garlic, paprika, cumin and a little chilli powder.
B’stilla
This
very special pie represents the pinnacle of exquisite Fassi (from Fez) cuisine.
Layers of a paper-thin pastry coddle a blend of pigeon meat, almonds and eggs
spiced with saffron, cinnamon and fresh coriander, the whole dusted with icing
sugar and cinnamon.
Try one
of our similar pastilla recipes
Mint tea
Known
as ‘Moroccan whisky’, mint tea is the drink of choice. It is usually heavily
sweetened with sugar chipped off a sugar cone. Gunpowder tea is steeped with a
few sprigs of spearmint stuffed into the teapot. It is poured into a tea glass
from a height to create a froth called the crown.
Are you
a fan of Moroccan cuisine? Do
you agree with our selection or have we missed your favourite? Share your
must-try dishes below…
Top 10 foods to try in Morocco
Reviewed by for engineering
on
أبريل 19, 2018
Rating:
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