Abu Lu'lu'a Fīrūz’s menu
Âsh (soup-staple of the Persian table)

Âsh-e adas — lentil and herb soup with kashk

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A rustic and nourishing soup where lentils melt with cracked wheat, perfumed with mint, coriander and dill, and bound with a spoonful of tangy kashk. The evening meal that sticks to the ribs without costing much.

Âsh (soup-staple of the Persian table)

A rustic and nourishing soup where lentils melt with cracked wheat, perfumed with mint, coriander and dill, and bound with a spoonful of tangy kashk. The evening meal that sticks to the ribs without costing much.

Approach, stranger, and see what my mother used to make in Nahavand. We threw the lentils into the water at dawn, with a little pounded wheat, and let them swell all day while I carved wood. In the evening, we scraped in the garden herbs and dissolved a hard kashk ball between our fingers — its sour edge wakes everything up, I promise you. Here, on this land of dates and she-camels, no one knows this taste; but I have not forgotten my father's table.
Abu Lu'lu'a Fīrūz
Ingredients
  • Brown lentilsa good handful per mouth (nourishing base)
  • Cracked wheat or hulled barleya small handful (binder, thickener)
  • Onionone (aromatic base)
  • Fresh mint, coriander and dilla large bunch (herbaceous freshness)
  • Kashk (dried whey)one ball, dissolved (sourness and umami — the signature)
  • Saltto taste (seasoning)
How it was made : Âsh are among the oldest dishes of the Iranian plateau — the word gave "cook" (âshpaz). Before rice became widespread, they thickened with cracked wheat and barley. Kashk, dried milk stored for long keeping, provided protein and acidity where fresh dairy was scarce.
Sources : Najmieh Batmanglij, Food of Life: Ancient Persian and Modern Iranian Cooking · Touraj Daryaee, Sasanian Persia: The Rise and Fall of an Empire