Showing posts with label fast food. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fast food. Show all posts

Feast In the Middle East: Eating Out in Qatar






During our week in Qatar, we explored the various culinary offerings of Doha, the capital city. The Middle East is known for its love of lamb, and in Qatari cuisine, the meat is used to create especially juicy kebabs. The best kebabs, which are smothered in rich, creamy sauces, or packed into pitas, along with vegetables and hummus, are found in the Souq Waqif, Doha's traditional Arab market.
Each Arab restaurant offers a wide variety of hummus dishes, whether on its own or mixed with vegetable and meat ingredients. My favourite hummus dish was one mixed with ground lamb, ground beef, and small crisp cubes of fat which melted in your mouth. When smeared on a slice of pita, the concoction tasted divine.
Approximately one-fifth of Qatar's population hails from India, so there is no shortage of restaurants serving Indian cuisine. As a lover of curry, I found this deliciously good news. On our third night, I ate a mouth-watering lamb curry. The lamb had absorbed the sauce like a sponge. It was the perfect curried dish.
If you are not adventurous enough to stray too far from your usual Western diet, simply head to a mall or The Pearl, Doha's upcoming high-end shopping district. At The Pearl, we had dinner at Carluccio's, a UK-based chain restaurant. I ordered an exceptionally meaty pasta, while my colleagues, Elaine Ng and Tim Ziegler, ordered a triumphant lasagna. The lasagna was as big as my head and had been baked in a thick casing of cheese. Cutting into the lasagna revealed a gorgeous core of tomato and lamb sauce, which oozed out at the corners. The lasagna at Carluccio's is reason enough for someone to want to live in Doha.

Fast Food in Qatar

If you are looking for fast food, Qatar has you covered. This is evident by the expanding waistlines you see on the street and the numerous diabetes education campaigns visible in malls and other public areas.
For example, the food court at the City Centre Mall in Doha has all the necessities of what has become known as the North American diet. To your left, Subway is written in Arabic; in front of you stands a McDonald's; and to your immediate right, both Colonel Sanders and the Burger King smile upon you.
Since the chain is known to set the standard of fast food around the globe, I decided to approach McDonald's. I was surprised to find items no longer available in Canada on their menu, including the Cheeseburger Royale and the Big Tasty. Also, their prices are lower than I expected (just US$4.39 for a Big Mac Meal). I decided to go for the McArabia. Geared to the local palate, the McArabia consists of two grilled chicken breasts on a pita topped with fresh tomato slices and diced lettuce. But in order not to make it too healthy (heaven forbid), the concoction is smothered in various creamy sauces. The McArabia is a tasteful novelty, but I still prefer my Big Mac.
Domestic Qatari fast food consists mainly of kebab and shawarma, which is usually grilled in front of you and costs next to nothing (e.g., US$2.75 for two kebabs). Unlike the kebabs in higher-end Arab restaurants, which are served on a bed of rice, street kebabs are wrapped in pitas. If you decide to go domestic: watch your place in line; and, if you hesitate when ordering, you risk being pushed out of the queue.

The Coffee Culture of Qatar

Qatar also has a prominent coffee bar culture. At the traditional Middle Eastern coffee bars you can still order a cappuccino, but the more adventurous type chooses something stronger. I chose Turkish coffee.
Turkish coffee came to the Arabian Peninsula with the Ottoman Empire, which held influence over the Middle East until its collapse at the culmination of the First World War. Noted for its strong flavour and prominent caffeine kick, Turkish coffee is not for amateurs. Having visited the Middle East before and previously tried it, I thought I could handle its bite. I asked our waiter for the strongest concoction they could brew.
It came to my table in a small brass decanter accompanied with an espresso-sized cup. The coffee oozed out of the decanter like wet sand and, before tasting it, I waited for the coffee grounds to settle. The taste overwhelmed my senses and the coffee stuck to my teeth and to the sides of my mouth. Immediately I felt uncomfortably awake. With my heart pounding, my head clouded and my brow sweating, I engaged my companions in fast conversation about controversial topics.
For those who do not care for coffee, Turkish or other, why not try shisha? The pastime of smoking shisha came to the Middle East via India sometime during the 16th century, and despite periodic bans, has become a common scene in Middle Eastern coffeehouses. I tried shisha when travelling to Iran as a student, and the process is more or less the same throughout the Middle East. Tobacco is the standard product smoked in shisha, but other non-tobacco herb products may be substituted. It is worth noting that although smoking these alternative herb products is still harmful, they do not have the addictive qualities of tobacco.
Coffeehouses serving shisha are easily recognizable by a collection of large waterpipes. A waterpipe consists of a perpendicular glass tube with a small metal bowl attached to its top. The bottom of the tube is submerged in a bowl of water to which hoses are attached. A man, called a fireboy, packs heaping wads of sticky flavoured tobacco or herb product into the metal bowl, over which he piles red-hot coals. Then, he gives you a sanitized mouthpiece which is connected to one of the hoses. You are ready for shisha.
Inhaled through the mouth, the smoke travels from the hot coals, through the tobacco or herb product, down the glass tube, through the water, and exits by the hose into the mouthpiece held between your lips. The smoke, which has been cooled by the water, tastes like a lightly flavoured summer breeze. You feel lightheaded. Relaxed. The best way to pass an afternoon.

Chinese Cuisine in Doha

What don’t we know about the ever popular Chinese food?! Well, besides the dumplings and noodles, Chinese food has a remarkable variety and diversity of food.
Chinese teas
It’s believed that the Chinese people have enjoyed tea drinking for more than 4,000 years, specifically for medical cures. Besides green and black teas, Chinese teas include Oolong tea, white tea, Dragon Well tea and there are also a variety to what are known us ‘scented teas’. But when the most popular Chinese teas is the bubble tea. Also known as pearl milk tea or boba milk tea, bubble tea is a Taiwanese tea-based drink invented in tea shops in Taichung, Taiwan, during the 1980s. The term ‘bubble’ refers to the chewy tapioca balls, which are also referred to as pearls, commonly added to the drink. Most bubble tea recipes are tea-based mixed with fruit or milk. Similar to slushys and milkshakes, ice-blended versions of bubble tea are usually mixed with fruit or syrup. There are many variants of bubble tea but the most popular are the bubble milk tea with tapioca and the bubble milk green tea with tapioca. You can try the bubble tea at Wok of Fame at Villaggio Mall.
Dumplings
With a long history of more than 1,800 years, dumplings are a traditional food widely popular in North China. Dumplings consist of minced meat and chopped vegetables wrapped into a thin piece of dough skin. Popular fillings are mince pork, diced shrimp, ground chicken, beef, and vegetables. They can be cooked by boiling, steaming, or frying. Dumplings are a traditional dish eaten on Chinese New Year’s Eve.
Wontons
Similar to dumplings are wontons, which has been a custom for people to eat wontons on the winter solstice since the Tang Dynasty (618–907). The most versatile shape of a wonton is simple a right triangle. Wontons are commonly boiled and served in soup or sometimes deep-fried. The filling of wontons can be minced pork or diced shrimp.
Ma Po Tofu
Ma Po Tofu
Ma Po Tofu
With a history of more than 100 years, ma po tofu is one of the most famous dishes in Chuan Cuisine. Ma describes a spicy and hot taste which comes from pepper powder, a kind of condiment usually used in Chuan Cuisine. The milky tofu is enriched with brownish red ground beef and chopped green onion.
Spring Rolls
Spring rolls are a Cantonese dim sum of cylindrical shape. The filling of spring rolls could be vegetables or meat, and the taste could be either sweet or savory. After fillings are wrapped in spring roll wrappers, the next step is frying. Then the spring rolls are given their golden yellow colour. The dish is especially popular in Jiangxi, Jiangsu, Shanghai, Fujian, Guangzhou, Shenzhen, Hong Kong, etc.
Beijing Roasted Duck
Peking Roasted Duck
Peking Roasted Duck
Peking duck is a famous dish from Beijing and considered as one of China’s national dishes. Peking duck is savoured for its thin and crispy skin. The Sliced Peking duck is often eaten with pancakes, sweet bean sauce, or soy with mashed garlic.

Enjoy some good food at Chinese restaurants in Doha!




Source-http://marhaba.qa/food-files-10-chinese-cuisine/

Use of fat in fast food to be restricted in Qatar

Limiting the use of industrially produced vegetable fats in margarine and publicly available fast, baked, and fried food is being targeted by the member states.

A discussion of study-based suggestions of member-countries on reducing the use of trans-fat in food will be done by a GCC Technical Committee for Food and Agricultural Products here today.

The panel will likely go through proposed amendments of rules concerning expiry dates of food items covered under GCC Standard, GSO 150-2/2013 after the two-day conclave, which began yesterday.

Also, the committee is finalising GCC labelling guides for foodstuff produced regionally and the rules concerning the use of preservatives in food and production of organic and genetically modified food, according to Qatar News Agency (QNA). Among its sub-committees and task forces is devoted to ‘halal’ food products.

The substitute to mother’s milk for children of different ages and vitamins and minerals permitted to be used in food has been approved by the committee.

Over 17,000 specifications for foodstuff at the regional level has been approved through its cooperation with GCC Specifications and Standards Authority.

An extensive set of health specifications for food handlers has also been approved.

Such are the over-all rules for health and safety requirements, which employees of hotels, restaurants, fast food joints, cafeterias, and traditional kitchen must adhere to and periodically secure certifications from public health authorities.

Nawaf bin Ibrahim Al Hamad Al Mana, Director, Standards and Metrology Management, Qatar, will attend the 22nd meeting of the committee being held.

He told QNA that the solutions to problems facing food monitoring authorities in the region has been included in the discussion through the efforts of the committee.

QNA said all issues being discussed or to be reviewed at the meeting have been intimated to World Trade Organization.

Al Mana said since its foundation, the committee has worked to ensure food specifications and standards it finalizes pass international standards. The committee works in coordination at the GCC level.