Maakouda are traditional potato fritters that are popular throughout the Maghreb, especially in Morocco, Algeria, and Tunisia. The fritters are usually prepared plain, but they can also be stuffed with meat, tuna, or cheese, although not that often. They're made with potatoes, parsley, garlic, flour, salt, and pepper. The potatoes are boiled, mashed, and mixed with other ingredients into small disks which are then deep-fried in hot oil until golden brown. Maakouda is traditionally served as an appetizer, a side dish, or an ingredient in a long sandwich roll that's usually sold as street food and served with harissa, coriander, and lemon juice. The fritters are especially popular during the month of Ramadan.
Mechouia is a Tunisian salad made with grilled, coarsely chopped onions, peppers, tomatoes, and garlic, drizzled with olive oil and seasoned with caraway, salt, and black pepper. The salad is then typically garnished with hard-boiled eggs, olives, or tuna. The salad can be served on its own, but it is also often served on toasted bread or baguette slices. It is quite common to find it in Tunisia as a part of a mix of appetizers in traditional restaurants.
Briouats are small and crispy Moroccan pastries that can be stuffed with a variety of ingredients such as chicken, lamb, cheese, or lemon. The pastry is either fried or baked, and it is often additionally sprinkled with various herbs and spices. It is typically folded into cylindrical or triangular shapes, then served as an appetizer. Briouats are especially popular during the month of Ramadan.
Tunisian brik is a popular dish that incorporates flaky dough filled with a variety of savory ingredients. Traditionally, malsouqa dough is used to create brik, but the more available phyllo pastry is commonly used as a replacement. Brik is usually made with layers of laminated pastry, to achieve a crunchy, layered texture. The pockets are filled with stuffing, skilfully folded, then shortly fried in deep oil or baked in an oven. The most common filling is tuna-based, enriched with traditional North African spices such as cilantro, chilis, pepper, or coriander seeds. A raw egg is often placed on top of the tuna filling, the pastry is carefully folded, and the egg partially cooks inside the flaky pastry. Other fillings can also include minced meat, anchovies, chicken, or various vegetables. Since this Tunisian classic is usually deep-fried, lemon wedges are a standard accompaniment to a plate of hot briks. The pastry is drizzled with lemon juice, which provides a hint of necessary freshness to the dish. Standard Tunisian wedding tradition suggests that the potential future husband is served an egg brik, and is supposed to eat it without dripping in order to be allowed to wed the bride. A plate of brik is commonly served as a Ramadan meal, but it is usually consumed throughout the year. Brik is always served fresh and hot.
Loubia is a traditional North African dish consisting of stewed white beans. This dish is very popular in Moroccan, Tunisian, Algerian, and Libyan homes, where the beans that have been simmered in a zesty tomato-based sauce are typically scooped up with homemade flatbread. It is comfort food that can be served both as an appetizer, garnished with some coriander or parsley, and as a side dish - especially when used as an accompaniment to fried fish. Simple, quick, and delicious - it is unsurprising that loubia is commonly found in homes throughout Maghreb region.
Mbatan batata is a Libyan dish consisting of fried potato wedges that are stuffed with a combination of flavorful ingredients. The filling typically consists of ground meat (beef or lamb), onions, breadcrumbs, parsley, garlic, chile peppers, eggs, and butter. The potatoes are first sliced in half, with the two slices joined together at the base so they can be loaded with the filling. They are then coated in eggs and breadcrumbs and fried in hot oil. This tasty dish is usually served as an appetizer, and it is especially popular during Ramadan. Although some like to drizzle a spicy tomato sauce over the potatoes before frying, they are much lighter and crispier when fried plain.
Moroccan cigars are slim, crisp, fried rolls filled most often with spiced ground meat and served as appetizers or snacks in North African and Middle Eastern Jewish cuisines, particularly in communities with roots in Morocco. Despite the name, they have no relation to tobacco products; the term refers only to their cylindrical shape. They emerged from the broader Moroccan practice of using thin pastry sheets for savory and sweet fillings, a technique seen in dishes such as briouat, where phyllo-like warqa dough is wrapped around seasoned mixtures. As Moroccan Jews migrated to Israel and other countries during the twentieth century, the dish became widely known in new settings and eventually entered Israeli street food, catering menus, and home cooking. Preparation begins by making or buying thin pastry sheets, warqa or phyllo, cut into long strips. The filling is cooked beforehand and typically includes ground beef or lamb sautéed with onions and seasoned with paprika, cumin, turmeric, pepper, salt, and sometimes cilantro or parsley. Once cooled, a small amount of filling is placed at one end of the pastry strip, which is then rolled tightly into a cylinder and sealed with a bit of flour paste or egg wash. The rolls are fried in oil until golden and crisp, though some cooks choose to bake them for a lighter version. Variations include chicken fillings, vegetable mixtures, potato-based fillings, or spicier versions using harissa or hot pepper pastes, all shaped in the same narrow form that defines the dish. Moroccan cigars are eaten in Morocco, Israel, and diaspora Jewish communities during holiday meals, Shabbat dinners, and family gatherings, and they also appear as mezze or snacks in restaurants. They are commonly served alongside salads, tahini, preserved lemon sauces, or dips made from peppers or eggplant. They pair well with mint tea, light beers, lemon-based drinks, and dry white wines, which balance the richness of the fried pastry and the spices in the filling.
Though its origins presumably lie in Morocco, matbucha is also a favorite in Israel, where it was brought by Jewish immigrants. The dish consists of roasted bell peppers and tomatoes seasoned with garlic and ground paprika. In Morocco, it is typically enjoyed as meze—assorted small dishes—while Israelis typically think of it as an appetizer. Matbucha should always be served drizzled with a generous amount of olive oil, accompanied by a warm flatbread on the side.
Mbatan kawali is a unique Libyan dish consisting of small fish fillets stuffed with a combination of potatoes, coriander, garlic, and hot peppers. The fish is then battered, breaded, and fried in hot oil. Mbatan kawali is traditionally served as an appetizer or as a side dish, and just like most Libyan seafood dishes, it is accompanied by a salad made with tomatoes, garlic, lemon juice, and cumin.
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