Shish kebab
Şiş kebap with "şehriyeli pilav" (orzo pilaf), onions with sumac, a grilled pepper, a slice of tomato (also grilled) and rucula leaves.
Shish kebab[1] (Turkish: şiş kebap) is a Turkish cuisine dish of skewered and grilled cubes of meat.[2][3] The term shish kebab has a history of over one hundred years in English. In American English, the word kebab refers to shish kebab, while in British English, kebab may also mean döner kebab or shawarma. In Middle Eastern cuisine however, kebab denotes a wide variety of different grilled meat dishes. Shish is the Turkish word for sword or skewer.[4]
Probably the best known Turkish dish outside Turkey,[5] shish kebab is generally made of lamb (kuzu şiş)[6] but there are also versions with beef or veal (dana şiş), swordfish (kılıç şiş)[7] and chicken meat (tavuk şiş or şiş tavuk). A traditional Turkish dish,[8] it may be considered a kebab variant, although it is more similar to shashlik of the Caucasus region.[9] (Shashlyk is the Russian word for şiş kebap.[10]) In Turkey, şiş kebap and the vegetables served with it are grilled separately, normally not on the same skewer.[11]
Some other Turkish kebab versions
Şiş tavuk
Kuzu şiş (Lamb shish kebab)
See also
References
External links
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Look up shish in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
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Wikimedia Commons has media related to Şiş kebap. |
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