One of my favorite Northern Arabian (Levantine) dishes is Kibbe Nayeh. Kibbe is a mixture of minced lamb (or beef, if you have no taste), bulgur, and spices. It can be fried, baked, stuffed, or eaten raw. I like the last option best.
Kibbe Nayeh is said to have originated in the great northern Syrian city of Aleppo (Halab - حلب), one of the world's longest inhabited urban conglomerations, and surely one of the most beautiful and historic cities in southwest Asia; now in ruins as Syria convulses with the intense violence of armed uprising and civil war.
Kibbe Nayeh is popular all over the rest of the Levant, most notably Lebanon. However, you would not find this dish in, say, the small farming villages of the West Bank or Gaza, where people would turn up their noses to the idea of uncooked meat, associating it with the more cosmopolitan, urban and somewhat dandyish practices of the Labanese and Syrians (my family in the West Bank certainly had this reaction when I mentioned it).
Made properly, Kibbe Nayeh exemplifies the essential, fundamental flavors of Levantine cooking: gamey lamb, mint & parsley, onions, allspice, hot peppers (optional) and olive oil. One bite, with a bit of toasted Arabic bread (preferrably from a bakery in Chicago or Dearborn, North America's homes of Arabic baked goods), telegraphs the culinary traditions and flavors of the Eastern Medditeranean better than perhaps any other dish I can think of.
Kibbe Nayeh can be made many ways - with or without hot pepper, with parsely or mint, or both. With or without allspice even. This is how I make mine:
3/4 - 1 lb. of lean lamb, preferably leg or loin.
3/4 cup of lebanese small grain bulgur.
1/2 medium onion, minced very finely.
handful of finely minced, fresh mint.
1 tablespoon allspice.
1-3 tablespoons of dried aleppo pepper or urfa biber (you can also sub finely minced fresh jalapenos or other chilis, or omit the hot stuff altogether).
good olive oil.
salt to taste.
1) The lamb should be washed with cold water and dried thoroughly. Use the best, freshest lamb you can find. Trim the meat of ALL fat and connective tissue.
2) Mince the lamb. This can be done many ways. Traditionally, a large mortar and pestle would be used. If you have one, you can use this to mince the lamb, as well as combine the rest of the ingredients. Otherwise, use a food processor, or do it by hand with a sharp knife, as I did. You want the consistency to be smoother than the ground meat you buy at the grocer. It should be almost a paste.
3) Cover and soak the bulgur in warm water for 15 to 20 minutes, until it is soft. Once it is fully soaked, squeeze all of the water out with your hands. You can also use a cheese cloth. The bulgur should be soft and the grains should separate.
4) Mix the lamb paste, soaked bulgur, minced onions, minced mint, allspice, hot pepper and a generous amount of salt (2 or more tablespoons). If you are using a mortar and pestle, pound away until the ingredients are incorporated. Otherwise, use your hands to knead the mixture until it is smooth and fully incorporated.
5) Plate the Kibbe Nayeh on a flat dish, and use your fingers to draw/press parallel lines across the meat. This creates several moats in which the olive oil will sit.
6) Garnish with generous amounts of the best olive oil you can find, fresh, lightly torn parsely, and green onion, radishes, and romaine lettuce, if you like.
7) Eat with warm Arabic bread.

What to do with leftovers? Shape into patties and fry in olive oil in a pan. You can eat them the next day.
Here's the plated Kibbe:
I served it with hummus, labneh with za'atar, tomatos and garlic, and olives, hot peppers and turnip pickles. And a great, juicy, southern Italian wine, which always goes well with lamb.

And just for the hell of it, this is what real hummus looks like:
"By the fig, the olive..." Surat Al-Teen, Mecca 95:1"