Moroccan Cuisine Is Worth the Trip

Moroccan Cuisine Is Worth the Trip


 I took the picture below of "Halwa Mja3ba" from this Cuisine Marocan Site! I'm submitting this post to Susan's Yeast spotting  a blog devoted to braised lamb tagine authentic food meat fruit and vegetables and spices Moroccan tray with bread as photographed in Africa Morocco Casablanca

While it is often easy to oversimplify the unknown, or at least the unfamiliar -- a place, a cuisine, not to mention a culture -- the real pleasure in travel or eating comes from discovering the unexpected and exploring the complexities and contradictions that we unfailingly encounter. When we scratch beneath the obvious and accessible, those polished but rarely three-dimensional surfaces found in glossy magazines or mid-century travel books, we find the essential elements that profoundly inform on the place. We need to sift a bit through the layers to find its truer essence.



Like any number of countries and their magnificent kitchens -- Turkey, Mexico and even Spain spring to mind -- Morocco frequently suffers a simplified fate, considered by many to consist of a largely homogeneous landscape and handful of familiar (though generally misunderstood) dishes.
As elsewhere, the food of Morocco begins with the landscape, and the country's geography is far richer and more diverse than most people imagine. The image of this North African country as a parched place with fortified earthen villages and oases of date palms is not wrong, just incomplete.
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In a way, Morocco is an island, surrounded largely by water (the Mediterranean Sea, the Atlantic Ocean) and scrub (the pre-Sahara and Sahara). But within those ample confines, a wide variety of climates and features exists: four mountain ranges, river gorges, mesas, forests with cedars and cork oak, scrubby plains, olive groves (Morocco is the world's second largest exporter of table olives) and vineyards. It has valleys with fruit orchards, meadows with wild flowers, farms producing excellent fresh goat cheeses, and, off its southern coastline, some of the richest fishing grounds in the world.
I have been traveling to Morocco for 15 years, but work on my recently-published cookbook, "Morocco: A Culinary Journey with Recipes," took me to its many nooks and rural souqs. Although one can talk about a unified "Moroccan cuisine" with a common range of flavors and dishes found across the country, I was trying to get a sense of the regional differences. The more I traveled around Morocco in that search, the more impressed I became by the sheer diversity of the physical landscape and what it produces.
Driving through the Middle Atlas one day among fields of ripening barley with red-petaled flowers rising exuberantly among the silvery-green stalks, the pavement gave way to a gradually-worsening dirt track crossed with streams and strewn with boulders, the kind of chassis-thumping route best navigated in a 4x4 -- or at least a rental car.
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Many roads appear grander on Michelin's map #742 of Morocco than they are in reality, and this one was no exception. But I was rewarded by entering a valley splendid with cherry trees. A couple of white vans were parked here and there in the shade and extended families were quietly harvesting fruit from their own trees.
I backtracked to the Berber town of Azrou, where I managed to arrive in time for a late lunch at the Hôtel Panoramic, a stout Protectorate-era place opened in 1928. Trout farmed in a nearby river were a specialty and prepared in a handful of manners, including the way that I eventually included in my book: Stuffed with grated carrots, fresh bay leaves, and a generous grating of black pepper, the trout--netted that morning--were quickly pan fried. In the empty dining room, cool and dim under the high ceiling, the floors polished, the massive fireplace in the lobby not yet lit, the earthy flavors of the countryside--precisely this countryside, from the hills rising around the hotel--were fine rewards for my effort.
For all the lamb tagines, grilled chicken skewers, and vegetable-laden couscous I ate on my journeys, some of my most memorable moments working on the book were discovering such unexpected fare as these stuffed mountain trout.
Related: How to sort out safe from sorry when foraging for mushrooms
Another revelation was mushrooms. The High Atlas mountains, stretching some 450 miles northeast from coastal Agadir toward Algeria and rising to nearly 14,000 feet, are dramatic and foreboding, though quite barren; the Anti-Atlas range, to their south, are largely barren and rock strewn. But the Rif Mountains in the far north are damp, fecund, and home to dozens of varieties of edible wild mushrooms. In the hills not far from the isolated, blue-hued town of Chefchouen on a drizzly day, one of the last of the year, my wife, two girls, and I hunted for chanterelles and cèpes. (There were truffles, too, one of our local guides said, pointing to a nearby hill. "But those are for export.") We returned to a rural auberge and had the spoils of our morning hunt prepared in the most divine and herb-laden omelets I have ever tasted.
Related: Moroccan food beyond the couscous
Even more unexpected were oysters. South, down the Atlantic from Casablanca, the coastline becomes largely inaccessible, wild, and windswept, and the road meanders past rocky cliffs, great sweeps of undeveloped beach misty from the crashing surf, and a few fortified fishing villages where seagulls wheel above ancient ramparts and brightly painted sardine boats. One stop along here is the village of Oualidia, whose specialty is oysters. Just as I had not expected to feast on local trout in the Middle Atlas or wild mushrooms in the Rif, devouring a dozen Japanese oysters on the half-shell while looking out over the lagoon where they had just been harvested came as another stunning treat.
Morocco's rich, complex history -- from the ancient Berbers to the Phoenicians and Romans, the Arabs, Muslim and Jewish exiles from Andalucía, trans-Saharan caravans, French and Spanish colonial rulers -- has offered cooks plenty of inspiration. After driving thousands of backroad miles over the course of more than a year's worth of near-monthly trips to Morocco, it was clear that, just as important, the country's vast and varied landscape gave them the raw materials they needed to develop one of the world's richest cuisines.
Related: Turkish Organics Not Just for Export Anymore
For the traveler to Morocco -- or Turkey, Mexico, or Spain -- pleasure lies in the unknown and the unexpected, in those tasty surprises that may be just around the next corner. The key is to get off the main road and keep pushing ahead to find them. Satisfaction, of course, goes beyond a delicious meal. It helps in understanding the land as well as the people. I found that learning about Morocco's food was to learn about its culture -- and it was this idea that spurred me on, corner after corner.








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traditional dresses of Caftan



I love all traditional dresses of Caftan!!!! Well composed and very beautiful colors!!!




Moroccan Wedding kaftan Dresses 1 Moroccan Traditional Women Dresses 2012

One of the oldest traditional dresses in the world, the Moroccan caftan, or takchita, dates back to the Merinide dynasty.Moroccans are proud of their caftan as a deeply-rooted symbol of popular culture. No matter the type or quality of the dress, the takchita holds a unique allure for women from all classes.



Takchita symbolizes Moroccan tradition and innovation and it has been the pride of Moroccan women.They wear it during celebrations especially for wedding receptions.


Very elegant two piece dress, traditionally called takshita, worn in Morocco during special occasions. It is beautifully embroidered. You could wear it with or without the belt.

The history of takchita dates back to the Merinide Dynasty.The takchita (alternate spellings: takshita, tackshita, tackchita) is a Moroccan traditional women‘s garment that, like the Moroccan caftan , is worn for celebrations, particularly weddings.












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different models of Caftan




Traditional Moroccan dress for women, available in many different models, colors and embroidery as well, price of the product range between 18 to 41 $.
We love a caftan. So when AHAlife, online purveyor of beautiful lifestyle products, ventured to Morocco for the country’s 2012 Caftan Show, we required a first-hand report.  Don your most decadent garb and hop on a magic carpet, because we’re off to Marrakech!  Details on the show’s inspiration, the sumptuous collections and the drama of it all, below…

The Caftan Show is the premiere fashion event in Morocco, a country renowned for glamorous cultural fusion.  The presentations are nothing like what we see in New York, Paris or Milan, though.  Here’s what makes Morocco’s  Caftan Show a specifically memorable event on the international fashion calendar:

Theme: The Caftan Show has a designated theme and this year’s extravaganza paid tribute to Ibn Battuta, a Moroccan explorer, considered the greatest traveler of the Old World (he logged more miles than Marco Polo).  Twelve international designers were invited to create a collection incorporating the concept of travel, adventure and discovery.  Each designer imbued the traditional caftan with spectacular colors and embellishment according to their chosen geography.  Even the set designs and dance routines celebrated their respective destinations.

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The Russian Inspired Collecion
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Entertainment: That’s right, we said set designs and dance routines.  Preceding each collection was an over-the-top dance number, choreographed by Jais Zinoun and replete with elaborate costumes and a gigantic movie screen background.  Belly dancers preceded the Arabian themed collection while mummies somersaulted through the air to introduce Egypt.  Moroccan pop star Abdelfattah Grini opened the show.  Can you imagine if New York Fashion Week turned it out like this before every collection?

Craftsmanship: In terms of handiwork, the only comparison to Morocco’s Caftan Show is Paris’ Haute Couture.  The detailing on each caftan is dizzying: sequins of many shapes and sizes, peacock feathers, voluminous ruffles, oversize tassels, webbed lace, miles of embroidery and exuberant textile hues a bucket of Crayola crayons couldn’t touch.  Traditional artisans spend hundreds of hours on each caftan.  Like Haute Couture, royals from the Middle East–and jet setters alike–will meet with designers afterward to have the caftan of their liking customized and made to measure.

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AHAlife's Rebecca Prusinowski takes in the afterparty in Marrakech
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Long and Late: Things in Morocco aren’t terribly organized, and that definitely goes for the Caftan Show.  But that’s part of this country’s appeal: It’s sensual, beautiful, and known for long nights.  The show started a couple hours late and was hotter than a hammam.  Well-heeled attendants hydrated with champagne and retreated to the atrium’s grand staircases to sit and fan themselves while waiting for the show doors to open.  Quite a juxtaposition against the opulent pieces that graced the catwalk later on!  We can only liken the experience to a Marc Jacobs show at the Armory (before he became punctual, circa 2007).  The afterparty was scheduled to begin at 11pm but didn’t get swinging until well after midnight.  But it was no matter.  Held at the just-opened Park Hyatt Golf Resort outside the city center, the entire property was awash in candlelight and boasted a fabulous band, more food than you can imagine, and glittering pools of water dotted with floating VIP islands.  Hundreds of party-goers danced until dawn–which is to say, in typical Moroccan fashion.

Feeling inspired by Morocco’s exotic wares but can’t swing the Caftan Show’s $80,000 designer price tags? Shop OliviaPalermo.com’s favorite caftans.

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