Kashk ( Kašk, ), () qurut (Tuvan language and , , , , , қурут, , Turkish language: kurut), chortan ( chort’an), or aaruul and khuruud (Mongolian: ааруул or хурууд) is a range of dairy products popular in Iranian cuisine, Caucasian cuisine, and Central Asian cuisine. Kashk is made from strained yogurt, drained buttermilk (in particular, drained qatiq) or drained sour milk by shaping it and letting it dry. It can be made in a variety of forms, like rolled into balls, sliced into strips, and formed into chunks.
There are three main kinds of food products with this name: foods based on curdled milk products like yogurt or cheese; foods based on barley broth, bread, or flour; and foods based on combined with curdled milk.
In Armenian – chortan ( chor means "dry", while tan is buttermilk, the leftover liquid from making butter).
In Turkic languages, qurut derives from the verb quru-t ('to make dry').
Modern kashk is usually a dish of dried buttermilk that can be crumbled and turned into a paste with water. This coarse powder can be used to thicken soups and stews and improve their flavor, or as an ingredient in various meat, rice or vegetable dishes. Drying allows a longer shelf life for the product.
Kashk is also central to the staple Iranian cuisine eggplant dish known as kashk-e bademjan.
According to Francoise Aubaile-Sallenave, the first known literary use of the term comes from the Armenian historian Yeghishe. The word Kashk is also mentioned in the Middle Persian text Xusraw ud rēdag in adjectival form: ārd ī kaškēn. the 10th-century Persian Shahnameh ("Book of Kings") by Firdausi the term is used in the sense of "barley flour", but it is also used for a mixture of cracked wheat and cracked barley. Aubaile-Sallenave argues that the original Persian kashk known from early Persian literature was made with barley that contained either a mix of leaven with water or some fermented milk. To answer questions about the modern meaning in Iran for a dried dairy dish, she argued, "Iranian speaking pastorialists, for whom dried sour milk was a staple, and who had no easy access to barley, applied the word kashk by analogy to dry sour milk". Charles Perry offers an alternate explanation based on the 13th century Arabic cookbook Wasf al-Atimah al-Mutadah which says dried yogurt was a Turkmens-style kashk.
A 10th-century Arabic cookbook describes two types of kashk, one made of wheat and leaven and another of sour milk. By the Middle Ages the word had two meanings, one referring to barley flour or a mix of barley and cracked wheat, and another to mean a meat or fowl dish cooked overnight ( kashak or kashba).
For traditionally prepared qurut water is added to full fat yogurt and poured into a goatskin "churn" - a sack hung from a tripod that is swung back and forth until the milk separates into a type of butter and buttermilk. The buttermilk is boiled and drained to obtain curd which is dried in the sun over a period of weeks to make qurut. While traveling in the Baluchistan English explorer Ernest Ayscoghe Floyer encountered this form of kashk:
When kashk is made with grain in the Armenian cuisine, Arab cuisine and strained yogurt is added to grain and stored until it begins to ferment. After being left to dry in the sun for over a week it is turned into a coarse powder by rubbing and sifting.
In Azerbaijan, qurut is made in a similar way from strained yogurt. Yogurt ( qatiq) is made from fresh milk and strained yogurt to make suzma qatiq. When the buttermilk "whey" has been separated from the butter using traditional methods the buttermilk curds are formed into small balls and dried in the sun.
In western parts of Azerbaijan boiled flat dough is layered with a qurut white sauce and chicken to make Azerbaijani xəngəl.
There is also a closely related dried food product called tarhana which is based on a fermented mixture of grain and yogurt or fermented milk. It is very similar to kishk of the Levantine cuisine described below.
In Lebanese cuisine, kishk is commonly used to this day, mixed with tomato paste, as a topping for manakish, a sort of flatbread cooked in an open oven and eaten for breakfast or a lunch. Traditionally, it would also be served with eggs, as a kibbeh stuffing, or in a soup, possibly with lamb meat fried in its own fat ( Kavurma).
In Jordan a dried yogurt similar to kashk called jameed is commonly used. Elsewhere in the Levant, similar products are referred to as drained labneh ( labneh malboudeh).
A 10th-century recipe for kishk recorded in the Kitab al-Tabikh was made by par-boiling dehulled wheat, milling it, and blending it with chickpea flour. Yeast, salt and water were added to make a dough from the flour, which was left in the sun for around two weeks, and re-moistened with sour yogurt (or sour grape juice) as needed. After 15 days the dough would be seasoned with mint, purslane, cilantro, rue, parsley, garlic and the leafy tops of Leek, shaped into disks, and allowed to dry in the sun.
It can be generally categorized into sweetened or unsweetened aaruul. It can also be categorized by its shape and size, by its hardness and its origin.
Keshk siyami, consumed by Coptic Christians during Lent, replaces milk with fermented squash. Keshk matrouhi, from Marsa Matrouh, substitutes cow or water buffalo milk with goat's milk and replaces wheat with barley, adapting to the region’s reliance on rain-fed agriculture. The integration of fig and olive trees with barley cultivation and goat herding supports sustainable production in the area.
The preparation of keshk sa‘idi involves multiple fermentation stages. Fresh milk is placed in a goat pelt called kerba (قربة), where it is churned to separate butter from buttermilk, laban kerba (لبن قربة) or laban khad (لبن خض). The butter is further processed into ghee, while the buttermilk is transferred to an earthenware container called zeer (زير) for fermentation, producing laban zeer (لبن زير). In the next stage, wheat is added, changing the mixture’s color and texture while increasing its probiotic content. The softened wheat forms a porridge-like consistency, which is then dried, crushed, and reintroduced to the fermentation process before being shaped into pieces and sun-dried on reed mats or inside clay rooms.
...from the butter manufacture is left the buttermilk called "Doogh." This is boiled, and the remainder is "luch"; this is pressed and dried, and becomes "shilanch", or in Persian, "kashk," a hard, white biscuit of very sour cheese. This is powdered, and, boiled with savory herbs, is very palatable.
Regional cuisines
Caucasus
Central Asia
Iran
Turkey
Levant and Arabian Peninsula
Egypt
See also
Bibliography
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