jonjonjon wrote:I also received a PM telling me that Hashalom serves it as well... anyone tried it??
Cynthia wrote:As is true with many dishes in this region, versions of this dish are fairly widespread. I'm guessing that Arabs must have carried it west as they swept across North Africa, because in the Maghreb (or Magrib), an area that comprises essentially the Atlas Massif and coastal plain of Morocco, Algeria, and Tunisia, there is a dish called chakchouka that sounds virtually identical to the dish you describe (and it's not a stretch to think shakshuka morphed into chakchouka as it moved west).
JeffB wrote:So Spanish baked eggs were not a gift of the Conquista? Astrolabes and horchata yes, tortillas and gazpacho, no. There are some obvious clues...
Antonius wrote:
It's exceedingly unlikely the Arabs brought this dish westward, since their expansion in that direction predated the arrival in Europe and thereafter the Maghreb of such American exotica as tomatoes and peppers by many centuries;
The difference between the forms of the name of this dish with «ch-» and «sh-» simply reflect the rendering of the Arabic into different orthographic systems, in the first case the French, in the second the English. The «ou» spelling is similarly a reflection of French spelling practice, where the high back rounded vowel is so rendered. Thus, «chakchouka» and shakshooka (usual Eng. spelling) are to be pronounced in roughly the same fashion, as approximations of the Maghrebian Arabic.
The dish surely arrived in Israel with the immigration of many Jews from North Africa and especially from Tunisia. Neither the dish itself nor the name are native to the Levant (though roughly similar dishes are made in various parts of the Mediterranean region). The paths of diffusion of the dish are discussed at some length in the aforementioned paper on Western Mediterranean vegetable stews.
Antonius
Antonius wrote:The dish can be ordered at a Tunisian place recently written up by howlop:
http://lthforum.com/bb/viewtopic.php?p=82328#82328
Antonius
JeffB wrote:A--
As you suggest, I was joking about the tendency to credit everything that exists across the Mediterranean to Arab influence. (This point has been discussed before here.) The tendency's pervasiveness is demonstrated by the fact that many, or most, might now assume that a dish known from the Levant to Spain is essentially Arab, even if it is based on potatoes or tomatoes (tortillas and eggs in salsa. eg). Before doing the legwork that you did, I would have, in my simple way, thought the dishes more likely to have originated with a people that had early and significant contact with the New World. Of course, one doesn't know until one does the hard work you did.
Cynthia wrote:And yes, that ch vs. sh was something that amused me fairly often in Morocco -- especially in chiche kabob.
PIGMON wrote:many other classic dishes indigenous to Tunisia such as brikh, mahkut (Tunisian tortilla de patata), hasbana, boulettes, merguez, and makhmuma (sp.), etc. Hopefully, I can convince my mother to do a brief post describing these Tunisian treasures since her expertise in this area is obviously far superior to mine.
David Hammond wrote:I tried the merguez sausage (described on the menu as "hot dogs," but this error was quickly corrected by the server), and was surprised by the relative lack of heat (which could be due to a capsaicin tolerance built up over a lifetime of living in chili-prone Chicago). My understanding was that this sausage contained harissa, which it may have, but I had a hard time detecting heat. Still, a tasty weiner, just not very spicy...at least as prepared at Carthage Cafe.
PIGMON wrote:David Hammond wrote:I tried the merguez sausage (described on the menu as "hot dogs," but this error was quickly corrected by the server), and was surprised by the relative lack of heat (which could be due to a capsaicin tolerance built up over a lifetime of living in chili-prone Chicago). My understanding was that this sausage contained harissa, which it may have, but I had a hard time detecting heat. Still, a tasty weiner, just not very spicy...at least as prepared at Carthage Cafe.
David,
Often times, Tunisian merguez isn't overly spicy at all. Just a hint of heat.
Coco wrote:Howlop and I are so pleased at the response and interest shown for Tunisian cooking which is a fresh, simple light cooking incorporating fresh vegetables herbs and spices such as caraway, coriander, cumin and "harissa"...
Rachel B. wrote:i love me some shakshouka. i get it at tel aviv pizza on 6349 N. California (bring the maalox). Next door to that is taboun, an israeli place, which probably has shakshouka for their sunday yemenite brunch. but shakshouka's pretty easy to make at home, esp. this time of year when red peppers and tomatoes are plentiful and cheap.