Mulukhiyah

Mulukhiyah

Levantine mulukhiyyeh with chicken.
Alternative names 'mloukhiya, molokhia, molohiya, mulukhiyya, malukhiyah, or moroheiya
Type Stew
Course Main course
Place of origin Cyprus, Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Palestine and Syria
Region or state Middle East
Main ingredients Okra leaves, beef or chicken stock
Cookbook: Mulukhiyah  Media: Mulukhiyah
Egyptian molokhiya. The soup is usually poured over rice or eaten with Egyptian flatbread (known as ʿeish baladi).
Seeds - Corchorus olitorius - MHNT
Jute, potherb, raw
(Corchorus olitorius)
Nutritional value per 100 g (3.5 oz)
Energy 142 kJ (34 kcal)
5.8 g
0.25 g
4.65 g
Vitamins
Vitamin A equiv.
(35%)

278 μg

Thiamine (B1)
(12%)

0.133 mg

Riboflavin (B2)
(46%)

0.546 mg

Niacin (B3)
(8%)

1.26 mg

Pantothenic acid (B5)
(1%)

0.072 mg

Vitamin B6
(46%)

0.6 mg

Folate (B9)
(31%)

123 μg

Vitamin C
(45%)

37 mg

Minerals
Calcium
(21%)

208 mg

Iron
(37%)

4.76 mg

Magnesium
(18%)

64 mg

Manganese
(6%)

0.123 mg

Phosphorus
(12%)

83 mg

Potassium
(12%)

559 mg

Zinc
(8%)

0.79 mg


Percentages are roughly approximated using US recommendations for adults.
Source: USDA Nutrient Database

Mulukhiyah, mloukhiya, molokhia, molokhiya, mulukhiyya, malukhiyah, or moroheiya (Arabic: ملوخية) is the leaves of Corchorus olitorius commonly known as Nalta jute and tossa jute.[1] It is used as a vegetable. It is popular in Middle East, East African and North African countries. Mulukhiyyah is rather bitter, and when boiled, the resulting liquid is a thick, highly mucilaginous broth; it is often described as "slimy", rather like cooked okra. Mulukhiyyah is generally eaten cooked, not raw, and is most frequently turned into a kind of soup or stew, typically bearing the same name as the vegetable in the local language. Traditionally mulukhiyyah is cooked with chicken or at least chicken stock for flavor and is served with white rice, accompanied with lemon or lime.

Mloukhiya is also the Moroccan term for okra, which goes by gnāwiyah (قناوية) in Algeria and Tunisia and bāmyah (بامية) elsewhere in the Arabic-speaking world and the Eastern Mediterranean.

Origins

While most scholars are of the opinion that mulukhiya's origins lie in Egypt, there are also those who believe India to have been the source.[2][3]

Egyptian cuisine

As used in Egyptian cuisine, molokhiya, (Egyptian Arabic pronunciation: [moloˈxejjæ]) is prepared by removing the central spine from the leaves, and then chopping the leaves finely with garlic and coriander. The dish generally includes some sort of meat; in Egypt this is usually poultry such as chicken, or rabbit,[4] but lamb is preferred when available, particularly in Cairo. Cooks in Alexandria often opt to use shrimp in the soup, while Port Said is famous for using fish.

Molokhiya was consumed in ancient Egyptian cuisine,[5] where the name "molokhiya" is thought to have originated from.

Many Egyptians consider molokhiya to be the national dish of Egypt along with ful medames and kushari.

Preparation

The Egyptian version differs in texture and preparation from the Syrian/Lebanese version. The molokhiya leaves are picked off the stem, often communally with the women sitting with vast amounts of tall stemmed branches picking it, placing the leaves on a large sheet (cloth material) left to completely dry for later use.

Cooking

The leaves are then fried with coriander, garlic and often chili peppers or capsicum. This cooking process prevents them from becoming slimy. It is then boiled with large chunks of meat, such as boneless chicken, rabbit, beef or lamb (with bone).

Serving

The soup is served on white rice or with a side of Egyptian flatbread (ʿeish baladi). The bread is normally used to scoop up the soup, but it can also be cut up into small pieces and submerged in the soup. The dish is often accompanied with an assortment of pickled vegetables known as torshi or mekhalel in Egypt.

Palestinian cuisine

The Standard Molokhia dish in the Levant is prepared by cooking a meat of some sort in a separate pot by boiling. Later onions, and garlic cooked to a simmer, then adding water and chicken stock cubes (well known brand is Maggi Cubes) as a broth. After boiling, the cooked chicken or meat and Molokhia leaves are added and further cooked another 15 minutes. Palestinians will serve Molokhia on a bed of rice topped with vermicelli noodles, and lemon juice and flat bread on the side.

The Palestinians Bedouins (/ˈbɛdᵿ.ɪn/; Arabic: بَدَوِي badawī) have an old tradition of cooking a different version of the dish.

A whole chicken is cut open, the intestines removed, and the innards stuffed with herbs, spices and raw rice then sewn shut with thick thread. The chicken is then boiled to create the broth for the Molokhia soup which, after preparation, is served as five separate components: The Molokhia soup, Arabic flat bread, the chicken (stuffed with flavored rice), additional plain rice and a small bowl with a mixture of lemon juice and sliced chilli. The soup is mixed with rice and lemon juice according to taste, while the chicken is eaten on a separate plate.

Kenyan cuisine

In Kenya, the dish is known as Mutere (Luragoli), Murere (Luhya),Apoth (Dholuo), Mrenda (Gikuyu, Embu, Meru), and several other native language names. It is a very popular vegetable dish among communities in the Western region (Vihiga, Kakamega, Busia, Trans Nzoia and Bungoma Counties) and in Nyanza region (Kisumu, Siaya, Homa Bay, Kisii, Migori and Nyamira Counties). Both regions are in the area around Lake Victoria. The jute leaves are separated from the stems, washed and then boiled in lightly salted water with ligadi (a raw form of soda (bicarbonate of soda), or munyu (traditional plant-based salt). The leaves are boiled with other leafy vegetables such as likuvi (Vigna unguiculata (cowpea) leaves) or mito (Chipilín) to reduce its sliminess and help soften the other vegetable leaves. In some cases, after boiling for about thirty minutes, the vegetables are stewed with tomatoes and onions in oil. (There are several general ways to prepare the mutere and more ways in which it is served). Spices such as curry, pepper, masala, or coriander are optional. Mutere is served with Ugali (a staple stiff cooked cereal meal) and can be accompanied with meat or chicken.

Tunisian cuisine

Tunisian mloukhiya stew with meat.

In Tunisia, the dish is generally prepared quite differently from the Egyptian method. The leaves, already separated from the stems are dried then ground to produce a very fine powder and stored in jars or other tightly closed containers. In Tunisian cooking, Mulukhya, or Mloukhiya, takes 5 to 7 hours to prepare, which is often done to halfway in the evening and completed in the morning. The powder is prepared with olive oil and some tomato paste into a sauce, not soup, and big chunks of chuck beef are often added halfway through cooking. The dark green sauce simmers on low heat and is left to thicken to the consistency of tomato sauce. The sauce is served in small deep plates with a piece of beef and eaten with preferably white hardy French or Italian bread. In certain regions where beef is not common, lamb is used but cooks for a much shorter time.

Cypriot cuisine

In Cyprus the dish is known as Molohiya. It is popular among the Turkish Cypriots. The Jute leaves are cultivated and grown in the spring months leading up to the summer wherein they are harvested and the leaves are separated from the stem and dried whole. Cooked in a tomato based broth with onions and garlic. Lamb on the bone or Chicken with bone may also be added. For optimal results lemon and potato are also used to help keep the consistency from becoming too mucilaginous or slimy. It is served with a nice broth consistency with sour dough bread.

North Levantine cuisine

North Levantine cuisine (Syria and Lebanon) differs from the remaining style in that the leaves are generally used whole, lending a different texture to the dish. Also, in northern Lebanon, a dish called "mloukhiye b zeit" is made using fresh leaves and shoots of the Nalta jute plant, cooked in olive oil, onions, garlic, tomatoes and chilli peppers, it is a popular summer side dish especially in Miniyeh-Danniyeh and Akkar districts.

West African cuisines

The leaf is a common food in many tropical West African countries. It is believed that the "drip tips" on the leaves serve to shed excess water from the leaf from the heavy rains in the tropics. In Sierra Leone it is called Kren-Kre (krain krain or crain crain), and is eaten in a palm oil sauce served with rice or cassava fufu (a traditional food made from cassava), or is steamed and mixed into rice just before eating a non-palm oil sauce.

Nutrition

The leaves are rich in betacarotene, iron, calcium, Vitamin C and more than 32 vitamins, minerals and trace elements. The plant has a potent antioxidant activity with a significant α-tocopherol equivalent Vitamin E.

Ancient references

The word for the plant is found in ancient Mediterranean languages such as Hebrew and Greek.[6] Cognates of the word include Ancient Greek μαλάχη (malákhē) or μολόχη (molókhē), Modern Greek μολόχα (molóha), modern Arabic: ملوخية (mulukhiyah) and modern Hebrew: מלוחיה (malukhia).[6][7]

Al-Hakim bi-Amr Allah banned mulukhiyah sometime during his reign (996-1021 CE). It is claimed he thought that the dish would lead women to debauchery.[8]

In an episode of the murder mystery yarn Murder She Wrote entitled Death n' Denial, sleuth Jessica Fletcher is coerced into eating a full serving of mulukhiyah after posing as the victim's mother in order to suss out a clue. She is shocked by the spicy nature of the dish but it is explained that she must finish the entire course or it would be considered an insult. The dish serves as somewhat of joke throughout the episode and when Jessica is offered the dish again in the final scene she is quick to decline.

See also

Notes

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Molokheya.
  1. USDA GRIN Taxonomy, retrieved 21 April 2016
  2. Cumo, Christopher (ed.) (2013) Encyclopedia of Cultivated Plants: From Acacia to Zinnia [3 Volumes]: From Acacia to Zinnia Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO. Vol. 1, page 315.
  3. Grubben, G. J. H. (ed.) (2004) Vegetables Wageningen, Netherlands : Backhuys. Page 218.
  4. NewsLifeMedia. "Rabbit molokhia". taste.com.au.
  5. Sarah Melamed (September 11, 2009). "Mloukhia , an Ancient Egyptian dish". Food Bridge. Retrieved June 9, 2014.
  6. 1 2 Douglas Harper. "mallow". Online Etymology Dictionary. Retrieved February 3, 2012.
  7. Khalid. "Molokheya: an Egyptian National Dish". The Baheyeldin Dynasty. Retrieved September 10, 2011.
  8. "Cooking lessons in Cairo". The National. Retrieved 2015-05-28.

References

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