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Bulgarian tarator
Tarator (Albanian: tarator?, Bulgarian: ???????, Macedonian: ???????, ???????, or ??????) is a cold soup (or a liquid salad), popular in the summertime in Albania, Bulgaria and the Republic of Macedonia. It is made of yogurt, cucumbers, garlic, walnuts, dill, vegetable oil, and water. It is best served chilled or even with ice. Local variations may replace yogurt with water and vinegar, omit nuts or dill, or add bread. The cucumbers may on rare occasions be replaced with lettuce or carrots. In Serbia, tarator is a type of summer salad.
Contents
1 Regional variations
2 Recipe
3 References
4 See also
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Regional variations
Tarator is consumed in Albania similarly to other countries. However, water, nuts, fruits and dill aren't used. Olive oil is often used in place of vegetable oil. In a different variation, this dish is enriched with a plain omelet, cut into little pieces and added to the mixture. Due to the richness the eggs add, this variation of tarator may be consumed as a main course.
Tarator is a popular dish in Bulgaria; a salad version of tarator is known as "Snowwhite salad", (Bulgarian: ?????? ????????- "salata Snezhanka" or "Snezhanka" ). It is made of thick yogurt and no water. It can be served as an appetizer or as a side to the main meal. It is a common refresher during the summer.
In Greece, a similar meal is known as tzatziki. Tzatziki usually contains olive oil, parsley and mint in addition to the ingredients listed above. The word used for the Cypriot variant, ttalattouri, derives from the word tarator via Turkish.
An similar dish in Iran called Maast-O-Khiar contains chopped onions instead of garlic and may also contain black pepper and raisins.
In the Republic of Macedonia, and in Bulgaria[1], tarator is a popular appetizer (meze) but also served as a side dish along with Shopska salad with most meals. Sunflower and olive oil are more commonly used and walnuts are sometimes omitted.
Tarator is a popular salad in Serbia rather than a soup; it is also known as "tarator salata". It is made with yoghurt, sliced cucumber and diced garlic, and served cold.
A Turkish variant, called cac?k, is similar to the salad version. It has a rich consistency and is served as a meze. However, a more liquidy, soup version is also sometimes used in Turkey as an accompaniment to certain dishes.
In Turkish Cuisine, the name "tarator" can also be used, but generally this differes from cacik. This may be a sauce made from some combination of oil, dry bread, nuts, lemon, salt, pepper, garlic, and herbs. One Turkish version using the name, tahinli tarator, is a similar dish specifically using tahin or sesame. This dish may also be found in neighbouring countries. On the south coast of Turkey, it is served with fried squid and includes yoghurt, lemon, walnut, olive oil, bread and garlic.
Recipe
This section contains instructions, advice, or how-to content. The purpose of Wikipedia is to present facts, not to teach subject matter. Please help improve this article either by rewriting the how-to content or by moving it to Wikiversity or Wikibooks.
To prepare tarator you need 1 fresh cucumber or 4-5 pickles, 1/2 kilogram of yoghurt, 1-2 cloves of garlic, some walnuts, some dill, salt, 2 teaspoons vegetable oil of your choice (sunflower oil is typically used), and water (depending on the thickness desired).
Preparation: Grate or finely chop the cucumber(s) and place in a large bowl. Mash the garlic with salt and add to the cucumber. Add ground walnuts and finely chopped fresh dill. Pour in the yoghurt. Then gradually add water the thickness is down to taste. Finally, add the vegetable oil.
To prepare the salad version of tarator, follow the same instructions but do not add water. For thick consistency, the yoghurt can be strained in a cloth or paper bag or filter, traditionally made of muslin, to remove the whey (strained yoghurt). As a quick alternative, one can add several tablespoons of sour cream to regular yoghurt.
References
^ pers comm, ???? ???????? ? ???? ??????
See also
Maast-O-Khiar
Bulgarian cuisine
Macedonian cuisine
Cac?k
Tzatziki
Milk salad
This food-and-drink-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.
Categories: Food and drink stubs | Bulgarian cuisine | Cuisine of the Republic of Macedonia | Turkish cuisine | Cold soups
Hidden categories: Articles lacking sources from November 2008 | All articles lacking sources | Articles containing Albanian language text | Articles containing Bulgarian language text | Articles containing Macedonian language text | Articles containing how-to sections(and so on)
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