Kanafeh

Kanafeh

Kanafeh (Arabic: كنافة), kadayıf (Turkish), kadaif (Albanian), kataifi, kadaifi (Greek κα(ν)ταΐφι), is a very fine vermicelli-like pastry used to make sweet pastries and desserts. It is sometimes known as "shredded phyllo".

Kanafeh originated in the Arab city of Nablus in the modern-day West Bank, where it is filled with Nabulsi cheese. [ [http://imeu.net/news/article00258.shtml Cuisine] Institute for Middle East Understanding. ] Another name for kanafeh is knafeh Nabulsiyye. It plays a central role in Palestinian cuisine and is the most famous throughout the Arab world.

Kanafeh is also found in the Balkans and is a feature of Turkish, Greek, and Levantine cuisine.

Kanafeh is made by drizzling a row of thin streams of flour-and-water batter onto a turning hot plate, so they dry into long threads resembling shredded wheat. The threads are then collected into skeins. [ [http://www.yogurtland.com/2006/03/11/how-the-kataifi-is-made/ How kataifi is made.] ]

Another variant has a cheese filling and called knāfeh, kunāfah, or kunfeh (Arabic; كنفه (Turkish;"Künefe").

Knafeh dough comes in three types:
*khishneh (Arabic خشنه) "rough", consisting of kadaif pastry, which looks like long thin noodle threads.
*na'ama (Arabic ناعمة) "fine", consisting of small pieces of semolina clustered together.
*mhayara (ِِArabic محيرة): which is a mixture of both khishneh and naa'ama.

The pastry is heated with some butter, margarine or palm oil for a while and then spread with soft cheese (see Nabulsi cheese) and more pastry; or the khishneh kunafah is rolled around the cheese. A thick syrup, consisting of sugar, water and a couple of drops of lemon juice, is poured on the pastry during the final minutes of cooking.

In Turkey, only kadayif pastry (shredded pastry;called "wire kadayif") is used for making künefe. Kadayif is not rolled around the cheese. Cheese is put in between two layers of wire kadayif. It is cooked in small copper plates, served very hot in syrup with clotted cream "kaymak" and pistachio/walnut.

Often the top layer of kadaif pastry is colored using orange food coloring. Crushed pistachios are typically sprinkled on top as a garnish.

Other variants

Kadaif

The threads are used to make pastries of various forms (tubes or nests), often with a filling of chopped nuts, like that used for baklava. A kadaif dessert is made by layering a mat of kadaif pastry, a filling of chopped nuts, then another mat of pastry. The pastries or dessert are painted with melted butter, baked until golden brown, then drenched in sugar or honey syrup.

Kataifi is sometimes used, in fusion cuisine, to make savory pastries. [ [http://www.abc.net.au/farnorth/stories/s598247.htm Prawns Kataifi] ]

Etymology

From the Ottoman Turkish word قطائف [kadaif] , plural of Arabic قطعيفه [qatˁiːfah] 'velvet'. This word originally referred to a kind of crêpe which was later cut into strips resembling modern kadaif.

ee also

*Phyllo
*Arab cuisine
*Levantine cuisine
*Palestinian cuisine
*Turkish cuisine
*Qatayef, the same word as "kataifi", but a quite different preparation
*Ekmek kataif, a sort of Turkish bread custard

References


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать курсовую

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Palestinian cuisine — Part of a series on Palestinians …   Wikipedia

  • Nablus — This article is about the city of Nablus in the northern West Bank, and its predecessor, the Roman city of Flavia Neapolis. For the biblical city of Shechem, at approximately the same location, see Shechem. Nablus Other transcription(s)… …   Wikipedia

  • Kadaif — Kunafah en una sartén. El kadaif, kadayıf (turco), kataifi, kadaifi (griego κα(ν)ταΐφι), knāfeh, kunāfah o kunfeh (árabe كنافة) es un tipo de fideo muy fino (vermicelli) usado para preparar dulces y postres …   Wikipedia Español

  • Palestinian people — Palestinians (الفلسطينيون al Filasṭīniyyūn) Tawfiq Canaan • …   Wikipedia

  • Turkish cuisine — Variety of Turkish Dishes Turkish cuisine (Turkish: Türk mutfağı) is largely the heritage of Ottoman cuisine, which can be described as a fusion and refinement of Central Asian, Middle Eastern and Balkan cuisines.[1] …   Wikipedia

  • Serbian cuisine — Part of a series on the Culture of Serbia Arts …   Wikipedia

  • Arab cuisine — is defined as the various regional cuisines spanning the Arab World, from Morocco and Tunisia to Saudi Arabia, and incorporating Levantine, Egyptian . Contents 1 History 2 Culture 3 Structure of meals …   Wikipedia

  • Nabulsi — may refer to: Items or people from Nablus, a Palestinian city in the West Bank Nabulsi soap Nabulsi cheese Kanafeh, also known as Knafe Nabulsiyye, a pastry made with Nabulsi cheese Surname Abd al Ghani al Nabulsi, Muslim scholar Shaker Al… …   Wikipedia

  • Kadayıf — Kadayîf (auch Engelshaar ) (griechisch κανταΐφι Kadaifi, albanisch: Kadaif) ist eine aus dem Balkan stammende Süßspeise. Kadayîf Dünne Teigfäden, die an Glasnudeln erinnern, werden auf ein heißes Blech aufgebracht und gestockt, um… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Iraqi cuisine — Tabbouleh, a popular Iraqi salad. Iraqi cuisine or Mesopotamian cuisine has a long history going back some 10,000 years to the Sumerians, Babylonians and Assyrians.[1] …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”