Everything about Tagine totally explained
A
tajine or
tagine (;
Arabic: طاجين, ) is a type of dish found in the
North African cuisines of
Algeria,
Morocco, and
Tunisia, which is named after the special pot in which it's cooked. The traditional tajine pot is formed entirely of a heavy clay which is sometimes painted or
glazed. It consists of two parts; a base unit which is flat and circular with low sides, and a large cone or dome-shaped cover that rests inside the base during cooking. The cover is so designed to promote the return of all condensation to the bottom. With the cover removed, the base can be taken to the table for serving.
Recently, European manufacturers have created tajines with heavy cast iron bottoms that can be fired on a stovetop at high heat. This permits browning meat and vegetables before cooking. While the similar
Dutch oven and
Sač spell (sach) (a cast iron pot with a tight cover) braises most efficiently in the oven, the tajine braises best on the stovetop.
Moroccan Tajine
Tajines in
Moroccan cuisine are slow-cooked stews braised at low temperatures, resulting in tender meat with aromatic vegetables and sauce. They are traditionally cooked in the tajine pot, whose cover has a knob-like formation at its top to facilitate removal. While
simmering, the cover can be lifted off without the aid of a mitten, enabling the cook to inspect the main ingredients, add vegetables, move things around, or add additional
braising liquid.
Most tagines involve slow simmering of less-expensive meats. For example, the ideal cuts of lamb are the neck, shoulder or shank cooked until it's falling off the bone. Very few Moroccan tagines require initial browning; if there's to be browning it's invariably done after the lamb has been simmered and the flesh has become butter-tender and very moist. In order to accomplish this, the cooking liquid must contain some fat, which may be skimmed off later.
Moroccan tajines often combine lamb or chicken with a medley of ingredients or seasonings:
olives,
quinces, apples, pears, apricots, raisins, prunes, dates, nuts, with
fresh or
preserved lemons, with or without honey, with or without a complexity of spices. Traditonal spices that are used to flavour tajines include ground
cinnamon,
saffron,
ginger,
turmeric,
cumin,
paprika,
pepper, as well as the famous spice blend
Ras el hanout. Some famous tajine dishes are
mqualli or
emshmel (both are pairings of
chicken, olives and
citrus fruits, though preparation methods differ),
kefta (meatballs in an
egg and
tomato sauce), and
mrouzia (
lamb,
raisins and
almonds).
Other ingredients for a tajine include any product that braises well:
fish,
quail,
pigeon,
beef, root
vegetables,
legumes, even
amber and
aga wood. Modern recipes in the West include pot roasts,
ossobuco, lamb
shanks and turkey legs. Seasonings can be traditional Moroccan spices, French, Italian or suited to the dish.
Tunisian tajine
What Tunisians refer to as a "tajine" is very different from the more well-known Moroccan dish.
Tunisian cooks, when speaking of tagines, will refer to them having a “beginning,” a “middle” and an “end.” "The "beginning" is usually a simple
ragout of meat cut into very small pieces and cooked with onions and various spices, such as a blend of dried
rosebuds and ground cinnamon known as
bharat, or a robust combination of ground
coriander and
caraway seeds called
tabil. Then something starchy is added to thicken the juices - common thickeners include
cannellini beans,
chickpeas,
breadcrumbs or cubed potatoes. When the meat is tender, it's combined with whatever ingredient has been chosen to be the dominant flavoring. Examples include but are not limited to fresh
parsley, dried
mint, saffron, sundried tomatoes, cooked vegetables, or even stewed calf's brains.
The "middle" part is the enrichment of the stew with cheese and eggs. The "end" is the final baking in a deep pie dish, either on the stove or in the oven until both top and bottom are crisply cooked and the eggs are just set, somewhat like an Italian frittata. When the tajine is ready, it's turned out onto a plate and sliced into squares, accompanied by wedges of lemon. Tunisian tajines can be made with seafood, or as a completely vegetarian dish.
In rural parts of Tunisia, home cooks place a shallow earthenware dish over glowing olive wood, fill it, cover it with a flat earthen pan, and then pile hot coals on top. The resulting tajine is crusty on top and bottom, moist within, and is infused with a subtle smoky fragrance.
Further Information
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