So I made musakhan, one of the most comforting dishes I’ve come across from the Levant. It’s a seemingly simple combination: roasted chicken, onions cooked slowly in olive oil with sumac, and flatbread that soaks up all those flavours.
The onions are really the heart of the dish. Cooked down until soft and sweet, then sharpened with plenty of sumac and layered over warm bread with the chicken. Finished with toasted nuts and more olive oil, it ends up rich, tangy, and aromatic. I do realise it doesn’t look like enough onion, but it seems to be all hidden under the chicken and flatbread.
What I love about musakhan is that it’s the kind of food meant to be shared, eaten with your hands. Simple ingredients, but when they come together like this it’s something special.
Always happy to hear suggestions for other traditional dishes to try next.
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So I made musakhan, one of the most comforting dishes I’ve come across from the Levant. It’s a seemingly simple combination: roasted chicken, onions cooked slowly in olive oil with sumac, and flatbread that soaks up all those flavours.
The onions are really the heart of the dish. Cooked down until soft and sweet, then sharpened with plenty of sumac and layered over warm bread with the chicken. Finished with toasted nuts and more olive oil, it ends up rich, tangy, and aromatic. I do realise it doesn’t look like enough onion, but it seems to be all hidden under the chicken and flatbread.
What I love about musakhan is that it’s the kind of food meant to be shared, eaten with your hands. Simple ingredients, but when they come together like this it’s something special.
Always happy to hear suggestions for other traditional dishes to try next.