**RESHTEH POLO: A Culinary Journey Through Persia's Fragrant Rice Dish**
Embark on a tantalizing culinary journey to the heart of Persia with Reshteh Polo, a delectable rice dish that harmoniously blends the flavors of toasted vermicelli, aromatic saffron, succulent lamb, and a medley of herbs and spices. This beloved Iranian dish has captivated taste buds for centuries and holds a special place in Persian cuisine.
Reshteh Polo's versatility shines through its variations across different regions of Iran. In the northern provinces, it's commonly prepared with succulent Caspian Sea fish, while in the south, lamb takes center stage, adding a rich depth of flavor. Vegetarians can also relish a meatless version, where flavorful vegetables and herbs create a symphony of textures and tastes.
The beauty of Reshteh Polo lies in its simplicity and the symphony of flavors that come together effortlessly. The toasted vermicelli, a key ingredient, adds a delightful crunch and nutty aroma to the dish. Saffron, the "red gold" of Iran, infuses the rice with its vibrant hue and distinct earthy flavor. Generous amounts of fresh and dried herbs, such as dill, cilantro, and mint, lend their aromatic touch, while spices like cumin and turmeric add warmth and depth.
In this comprehensive guide, we present a collection of Reshteh Polo recipes that cater to various preferences and dietary restrictions. From the classic lamb Reshteh Polo to the vibrant fish and vegetarian versions, each recipe is meticulously crafted to ensure an authentic and unforgettable culinary experience.
So, gather your ingredients, prepare your taste buds, and let's embark on this culinary adventure, exploring the depths of Reshteh Polo's flavors and aromas.
RESHTEH POLO (PERSIAN NOODLE RICE)
Reshteh polo is a fragrant rice and noodle dish often served at Nowruz (Iranian New Year) for lunch or dinner. You can purchase the roasted noodles from Iranian markets or online. The noodles in this dish symbolize good wishes for the new year. This version is prepared with crispy, saffron-tinged potato tahdig.
Provided by Naz Deravian
Categories Side Dish Rice Side Dish Recipes
Time 3h35m
Yield 10
Number Of Ingredients 14
Steps:
- Place rice in a medium bowl and cover with tepid water. Gently swish it around with your finger to activate the starches, then tip the bowl to drain water. Repeat this process until water runs clear, about 7 rinses. Cover rice with cold water, add 1/2 tablespoon salt, stir gently, and soak for 1 hour. Drain rice without rinsing.
- Crush saffron threads to a powder in a small mortar and pestle. Transfer to a small bowl with 2 tablespoons boiling water. Stir, cover, and set saffron water aside.
- Fill a 5-quart nonstick pot with 9 cups water and bring to a boil over medium-high heat. Add 3 tablespoons salt and stir until dissolved. Break roasted noodles into thirds and add to the boiling water with the rice. Stir once gently, and watch carefully as it cooks so water does not boil over. Taste water for salt and adjust accordingly. Cook until the first rice grain pops up to the surface. Set a timer for 4 minutes and cook, scooping off any foam from the surface, until the timer goes off. Test rice and continue to cook until tender on the outside but still firm to the bite on the inside, 6 to 8 minutes more.
- Drain rice and noodles in a colander and rinse quickly with lukewarm water and a spray faucet to rinse off extra starch. Taste and gently rinse again if too salty. Set aside to drain completely. Wash and dry the pot.
- Place the clean pot over medium heat. Add oil, 1 tablespoon saffron water, and a pinch of salt; swirl the pot until the bottom and lower sides are coated with the oil mixture. Tightly overlap potato slices in a single layer covering the bottom of the pot to create the tahdig layer.
- Gently scatter rice-noodle mixture over the tahdig in a pyramid shape, making sure potatoes are completely covered and moving noodles away from the sides of the pot. Gently poke the handle of a wooden spoon into the rice and noodles a few times, being careful not to hit the tahdig; this will allow steam to escape while cooking. Cover and cook until you see steam escaping from the sides of the lid and tahdig starts to set, about 10 minutes.
- Meanwhile, combine 1/4 cup boiling water with 2 tablespoons melted butter and remaining saffron water. Lay a kitchen towel out on a heatproof surface.
- Test the tahdig by quickly tapping the side of the pot with a wooden spoon. When the pot sizzles, remove it from the heat. Remove the lid and place it on the kitchen towel, being careful that none of the condensation drips into the pot. Wrap the towel around the lid and secure the ends at the top by the handle so they will not hang near the heat source. Drizzle the butter mixture over the rice and cover with the towel-wrapped lid.
- Place a heat diffuser on a burner over low or medium-low heat and return the pot to the stove. Cook until crispy, rotating the pot a few times, about 35 minutes. Remove from the heat and place on a damp kitchen towel; let sit, uncovered, for 5 minutes so tahdig will release easily.
- Meanwhile, melt 3 tablespoons butter in a small pan over medium heat. Add dates, raisins, and cinnamon; sprinkle with a little salt. Cook and stir until dates are glistening and soft, 3 to 5 minutes.
- Gently scatter rice on a platter and remove potato tahdig pieces and serve on the side. Sprinkle raisin-date sauce over top.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 287.4 calories, Carbohydrate 44.6 g, Cholesterol 15.3 mg, Fat 11.7 g, Fiber 2.4 g, Protein 3.7 g, SaturatedFat 4.3 g, Sodium 2123.5 mg, Sugar 15.7 g
RESHTEH POLO | PERSIAN NOODLE RICE
In this recipe, you steam the parcooked rice and toasted noodles layered with flavored meat properly and a tasteful polo will be born!Reshteh Polo is one of the dishes you will learn right ahead and you will be able to make it with no energy consuming! The dish is cheap and easy to prepare. But the point is buying the noodles as they might not be able in every shop. Persian shops might have it and you will enjoy the taste and fragrance of the noodles. If you are bored and tired of steaming or straining the white rice and the simple result, you can go for this recipe. The noodles give a desirable shape and façade to the rice, which is appetizing.
Provided by PersianGood Team
Categories Main Course
Number Of Ingredients 11
Steps:
- For making Reshteh polo with chicken, you need to cook the chicken breasts first. To do so, fry the onions with a mixture of oil and butter. Roast the chicken with 2 tablespoon of onions and condiments like pepper, turmeric and salt. When the chicken changes color to white and a bit golden, add some (about a glass) water to it, bring to a boil, then reduce heat to medium-low, cover and simmer.
- When the chicken is cooked finely, almost 5 millimeters of the liquid is left in the pot. Rest the chickens of the pot and let them cool a bit. Then shred the flesh and return the meat to the previous pot. Add some butter, brewed saffron and roast them a bit.
- Add the cinnamon to the roasting shredded chicken breasts. Let the particles absorb the remaining water then remove the meat and put aside. The chickens should not be too dry.
- Clean out the pot you cooked the meat in and pick another one. Pour water in both and bring to the boil. Add some salt and oil to the water, put Reshteh noodles and rice separately in the bowls. Better to break the noodles beforehand. Parcook noodles (as in Macaroni) and rice. Rinse the Reshteh noodles and add them to the parboiling rice and stir. Rinse them all and put aside.
- Pick a pot and grease with oil. Cover the surface of the pot bottom with the potato rounds to have potato tahdig, or pieces of bread instead. Pour half of the rice and noodles into the pot and spread it evenly over the bottom. Spread the meat mixture evenly over the layer of rice. Then spread the remaining rice evenly over the meat. Top the rice mixture with a little butter and turmeric then steam the polo. Pour the brewed saffron on top of the content. In order not to have dried noodles, add half a cup water to the pot. (Traditional Reshte Polo itself does not contain chicken breast. Adding shredded meat is optional.)
- Place the pot on high heat for 5 minutes, then reduce to low and steam for about 45 minutes. Then remove the pot from the heat.
- Meanwhile polo is steaming, prepare the raisins. Grease a pan with some butter and roast the raisins in it. If you want, sprinkle some cinnamon on raisins while roasting. If you do not like raisins, replace it with barberries. Soak the barberries for 15minutes and rinse afterward. Heat some butter or oil in a pan and roast them. If sour taste of barberries bothers you, add ½ of teaspoon sugar to them and stir. Use them for a garnish. Your polo is ready.
RESHTEH POLO
Reshteh polo is a classic Iranian rice dish that's common for Nowruz (Persian New Year). It's traditionally made with reshteh polo, which translates to "noodles for rice." Since this type of noodle is challenging to find outside of Iran, I've developed this recipe using vermicelli which, when toasted, closely resembles the Persian noodles. This dish is usually served with saffron chicken for the New Year.
Provided by Food Network Kitchen
Categories main-dish
Time 1h15m
Yield 6 servings
Number Of Ingredients 14
Steps:
- For the rice and noodles: Sprinkle the saffron on the ice cubes and set aside to melt. This will be your bloomed saffron.
- Rinse the rice in a bowl a few times until the water runs clear. Drain and set aside.
- Melt the butter in a large saucepan over medium-low heat. Add the vermicelli and saute until the noodles turn deep brown but do not burn, 6 to 8 minutes. Set aside.
- Fill a 6-quart pot halfway with water and bring to a boil over medium-high heat. Add 2 tablespoons salt and the rice. Simmer over medium heat until the rice is al dente (if you press a grain between your thumb and index finger, it should break but still be firm in the center), about 7 minutes. Add the vermicelli to the pot and cook for 1 minute. Drain the rice and vermicelli in a colander and rinse briefly with cold water. Reserve the pot.
- Peel the potato and cut it into 1/4-inch-thick slices. Add the vegetable oil to the reserved pot and sprinkle with the turmeric. Arrange the potato slices over the bottom of the pot. Spoon a third of the rice and vermicelli mix over the potatoes and sprinkle with 1/2 teaspoon of the cinnamon and a pinch of salt. Repeat with half of the remaining rice and vermicelli mix and another 1/2 teaspoon cinnamon and pinch of salt. End with the remaining rice and cinnamon and another pinch of salt.
- Set the pot back medium heat. Poke 5 holes in the rice using the end of a wooden spoon. Wrap the lid in a kitchen towel and cover the pot. Cook until the rice is tender and the potatoes are easily pierced with a paring knife with no resistance, 25 to 35 minutes.
- For the toppings: Meanwhile, melt the butter in a large skillet over medium-low heat. Saute the raisins until plump and shiny, about 1 minute. Transfer to a bowl. Heat the vegetable oil in the same skillet. Add the onions and saute until golden and tender, about 10 minutes.
- When the rice mixture is ready, transfer 1/2 cup of it to a bowl, add 2 tablespoons of the bloomed saffron and mix with a spoon. Spoon the remaining rice onto a platter and arrange the potatoes around it. Top with the saffron-flavored rice, onions and raisins.
RESHTEH POLO - PERSIAN RICE WITH NOODLES
This is one of my favorite dishes! I love being able to indulge in the best of carbs - basmati rice and reshteh noodles. You can find reshteh noodles at most Middle Eastern markets. It is a thin, flat pasta that kind of resembles capellini or fettuccine.
Provided by Barbell Bunny
Categories Long Grain Rice
Time 1h45m
Yield 4 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 14
Steps:
- In a large pot, saute onion until nice and golden.
- Remove pits from dates and dice them.
- In another pot, saute the reshteh noodles in butter until golden. Keep an eye on them, as they burn easily.
- Prepare your basmati rice according to my "Persian Rice" recipe. When you add the rice to the water, add the reshteh noodles too.
- Once the onion is nice and golden, add one tablespoon butter. Add turmeric and cinnamon. Give the pan a nice stir.
- Add dates and raisins. Give the pan a stir.
- Add orange peel. Season to taste with salt and pepper.
- Note: if the ingredients seem kind of dry, add a tablespoon of butter.
- After draining your rice and reshteh noodles, place 2 tablespoons canola oil in the bottom of the rice/reshteh pot and add enough water to cover the bottom.
- Add one layer of rice/reshteh noodles to the pot.
- Sprinkle 1/4 teaspoon of advieh spice (or bouillon).
- Place half of the date-raisin-orange-peel-onion mixture on top.
- Repeat with another layer of rice/reshteh noodles and the remainder of the date-onion mixture.
- End the layering with the rice-reshteh noodles.
- With the end of the spatula, make 5 holes to circumference the rice.
- Cook covered on high for 10 minutes.
- Ground the saffron and dissolve in 1/4 cup of hot water. Add 1 tablespoon butter t the saffron and mix well. Pour the saffron mixture over the rice.
- Cover the top of the pot with a towel and cover with the lid. Steam rice on low for one hour.
- Once the rice is done, place the rice in a dish and sprinkle the almonds and pistachios on top.
- At the bottom of your pot you will find a crunchy rice delicacy Persians love, called tadigh. Break it into pieces with a spatula or spoon and serve in a separate dish.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 575.9, Fat 17.8, SaturatedFat 3.4, Cholesterol 31.5, Sodium 68.4, Carbohydrate 94.3, Fiber 6.8, Sugar 13.7, Protein 12.3
Tips:
- For the best results, use high-quality Persian reshteh noodles.
- If you don't have access to Persian reshteh noodles, you can substitute angel hair pasta or thin vermicelli noodles.
- Be sure to toast the reshteh noodles in a pan until they are golden brown and fragrant. This step adds a delicious nutty flavor to the dish.
- Use a good quality basmati rice. Basmati rice is a long-grain rice that is known for its light and fluffy texture.
- Soak the rice in water for at least 30 minutes before cooking. This will help to remove the starch from the rice and prevent it from becoming sticky.
- Use a heavy-bottomed pot to cook the rice. This will help to distribute the heat evenly and prevent the rice from burning.
- Be sure to add the correct amount of water to the rice. The general rule of thumb is to use 1 cup of water for every cup of rice.
- Do not stir the rice while it is cooking. Stirring the rice will release the starch and make it sticky.
- Once the rice is cooked, let it rest for a few minutes before fluffing it with a fork. This will help to prevent the rice from becoming mushy.
Conclusion:
Reshteh polo is a delicious and flavorful Persian dish that is perfect for any occasion. It is a popular dish for Nowruz, the Persian New Year, and is also commonly served at weddings and other special events. The combination of toasted reshteh noodles, fluffy basmati rice, and flavorful stew makes this dish a true delight. If you are looking for a new and exciting Persian dish to try, reshteh polo is a great option.
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