Morocco Travel Guide

(lu) #1
Moroccan

Snacks

» » fresh or dried fruit
» » roasted almonds,
chickpeas, and
pumpkin and sunflower
seeds
» » hard-boiled eggs
with fresh cumin
» » roasted corn fresh
off the brazier
» » sandwiches of
brochettes or merguez
with cumin, salt and
harissa
» » escargot (snails) in
hot, savoury broth
» » ice cream
» » patisseries
(Moroccan or French)


»   »   Marrakesh   Bessara (fava   beans   with    cumin,  paprika,    olive   oil and salt); tanjia (crock-pot    stew    of  seasoned    lamb    cooked
for eight to 12 hours in a hammam)
» » Meknès Kamama (lamb stewed with ginger, smen, saffron, cinnamon and sweet onions)
» » Southern Coast Amelou (argan-nut paste with honey and argan oil)
» » Tangier Local variations on tapas and paella

Street Eats

Sidewalk cafes and kiosks put a local twist on Continental breakfast, with Moroccan pancakes
and doughnuts, French pastries, coffee and mint tea. Follow your nose and rumbling stomach
into the souqs, where you’ll find tangy olives and local jiben (fresh goat’s or cow’s milk cheese)
to be devoured with fresh khoobz (Moroccan-style pita bread baked in a wood-fire oven until
it’s crusty on the outside, yet fluffy and light on the inside) . Khoobz can be found wrapped in
paper at any hanout (cupboard-sized corner shops found in every neighbourhood).


In  the souqs,  you can’t   miss    vendors with    their   carts   piled   high    with    fresh
fruit, singing their own praises. They’re right: you’ll never know how high
oranges can be stacked or how delicious freshly squeezed aseer limoon
(orange juice) can be until you pay a visit to a Moroccan juice-vendor’s
cart. Drink yours from a disposable cup or your own water bottle, because
the vendor’s glasses are rinsed and reused dozens of times daily.
One savoury southern breakfast just right for chilly mornings is bessara
(a steaming-hot fava-bean puree with cumin, olive oil, and a dash of
paprika), best when mopped up with khoobz still warm from the communal
oven right down the street. For a twist on the usual French breakfast
pastries, try rghaif (flaky, dense Moroccan pastries like flattened
croissants), typically served with warm honey, apricot jam, or if you’re
lucky, nutty tahalout (date syrup). The truly adventurous can start their day
with a rich stew of lamb’s head or calves’ feet, generously ladled into an
enamel bowl from a huge vat precariously balanced on a makeshift Buddha
gas burner.

Breakfast of Champions

As a guest in a Moroccan home, you’d be treated to the best of
everything, and the best guesthouses scrupulously uphold this Moroccan
tradition each morning. You’ll carb-load like a Moroccan marathoner, with some combination of
the following to jumpstart your day:


Ahwa (Coffee) Ahwa is one option, but also café au lait, thé b’na na (tea with mint) or thé wa
hleb (tea with milk), wa (with) or bla (without) sukur (sugar).


Aseer limoon (Orange juice)


Bayd (Eggs) Cooked in omelettes, with a dash of kamun (freshly ground cumin) or zataar
(cumin with toasted sesame seeds).


Beghrir Moroccan pancakes with an airy, spongy texture like crumpets, with honey or jam.


French pastries Croissants, pain au chocolat and others.


Khoobz Usually served with butter and jam or olive oil and zataar .

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