Tuesday, July 3, 2012

103. Kubba Halab


Kubba halab, or kubbat halab, is an Iraqi delight named in homage to the Syrian city of Halab. Halab is famous for its several types of kubbas.
Kubba generally uses burghul or jereesh as part of the crust, but this one, a personal favorite by far, uses rice.
The usual filling of minced meat applies here, though a touch of ground noomi is added to enhance the flavor.
I've been making these little gems for years, but adusted slightly my recipe according to suggestions provided by Manal.
Presented here is the perfected version.


Noomi Basra (Dried Limes)


Ingredients:

For the filling:
300g minced meat
2 onions, chopped finely
1 tsp salt
1/4 tsp pepper
1/4 tsp cinemon
1/4 tsp alspice
1/2 tsp ground noomi
1 cup parsley, chopped

For the crust:
1 cup rice
2 large potato, peeled, cut into cubes
1 tsp salt
1/2 tsp turmeric
1/4 tsp paprika




The filling: minced meat, onions, parsley.

The crust: potato, rice, spices.

Cooling on a tray.

Grinding to form the crust.

Left: filling. Right: crust.

Forming the kubba, steps.

Lining in single layer to freeze.
 


Method:

To make the filling: saute the mince in a pan until browned, add the onion, salt, pepper, cinemon, alspice, and noomi. Keep cooking until onions are transparent and there is little to no liquid left.
Remove from heat, allow to cool slightly, stir in the parsley, allow to cool completely.

To make the crust, boil all the crust ingredients together for 10 to 15 minutes until the potatoes are half cooked and the rice grains have doubled in size.
Drain and spread on a tray to cool and dry off.

Push the crust ingredients through a meat grinder machine (using the fine hole disc).
Knead the resulting dough a bit.

To form the kubba, it is easier to have a bowl of water to wet your hands with so it will not stick.
Take a walnut-sized ball of dough, and cradeling it in the palm of one hand, use you index finger of the other hand to fom a hollow in the middle of the ball (see picture).
Fill with a teaspoon of the filling, and seal, eventually forming a torpedo shape, with slightly pointy ends.

I suggest freezing the kubba, in a single layer and well spaced before deep frying them.
If they are not fried frozen, they might break up inside the frying oil and cause a large mess.
While frying, avoid touching with any tool as it might break the fragile crust. Instead, gently swirl the pot to allow the kubba to turn themselves over.

Serve warm as a side dish

Other Kubbas:
Kubba Burghul
Beetroot Kubba
Lentil Kubba
Rice Kubba
Semolina Kubba
Potato Chap
Kibbe Bil-Siniyeh (Tray Kubba)


 صحة و عافية

17 comments:

A. R. said...

Thank you so much for this recipe, it's also my favourite kubba by far. I can't wait to try it out. Does this recipe yield the amount shown on the tray? Also, I don't have a meat grinder, what's an alternative way to mix the crust if there is one?

Thanks again

A.R.

Maryam said...

Thanks for your comment!
The ingredients listed would normally yield abour 35 kubba. I tend to double or sometimes treble the recipe to freeze.
I think a regular food processor might work as a substitute to the grinder, just make sure that it will handle a bulk (for your safety), and you might consider processing in batches.
Thanks again for your visit, feel free to comment or ask anytime.

Iraqiya said...

I bought an Iraqi book and the first recipe I tried was the kubbat halab. It failed miserably. They didn't have potatoes added in the rice only eggs. And it didn't hold together. Til3at li3ban nafis hasha il ni3ma. I'm definitely gonna try your way! Thanks for the recipe...

Maryam said...

Yes, God knows I've tried many many recipes before finding the perfect one! I've tired with plain rice, and with eggs, so when I finally tried it with potatoes it was like a revelation!! Just be careful to not add too much potato, otherwise it will resemble potato chap rather than kubba halab. Bil afia habibti and shukran hwaya for your comment.

Anonymous said...

Is the crust crisp when it is fried? I purchased some and loved them, the crust was thin and crisp. I would like to make my own.
Caroline

Maryam said...

The crust is most certainly crisp when fried appropriately, and remains so for about an hour within frying. So this is a dish to be fried just before serving.

Anonymous said...

Maryam these look amazing. How long do you fry them for?

Maryam said...

Just until they get crispy and begin to color, it could take anything from 3 to 6 minutes, depending on how hot your oil is :)

Unknown said...

Hi Maryam. This is neat and well illustrated. I will try the recipe. Hope it does not take me all weekend to make 35 kubbas!

Maryam said...

Thanks Bedra!
Don't worry, practice makes perfect, and recruit help to make it easier!

Unknown said...

Assalam Maryam. I was asked by my Iraqi friend to try this kubba. She wants to give the recepie in arabic...oh gosh...i cant translate arabic...so i google and found yours. I gonna want to try as soon as possibble..I like the easy ingredients used hopely i could do it perfectly...thanks Mary for the lovely recepie

Maryam said...

Was Salam Mariam, good luck and let me know how it works out!

Ladybug said...

I read that if u freeze them and fry frozen they would take fall apart

Maryam said...

When I fry them frozen solid they come out better then the freshly made ones OR thawed kubba (which are disasterous). Conduct an experiment and see for yourself.

Anonymous said...

Can I use rice pudding rice for the kubba halab shell?

Maryam said...

I think there is no issue in using short grain rice. It might be very sticky though so that might be a bit tough to handle. Taste-wise I think it's OK.

Anonymous said...

Can you bake these instead of frying them?