Kibbeh
The Lebanese Connection

Many moons ago -- over 300, as a matter of fact -- I was the manager of Pier 1 Imports here in Knoxville. My favorite lunch spot was a deli just down the street run by a couple of Lebanese brothers. These young men had immigrated to this country and were in the process of gradually moving their family from Lebanon. To accomplish this they both worked from opening at 7:00 am until closing at 1:00 am.
Over the years they sent money home and brought family over who would take their turn working alongside the brothers before moving on -- a constant, if slow, stream of young men and women. The brothers even managed to save enough to buy the building the deli was in and the stretch of tremendously valuable real estate it rested on.
I stopped in there the other night for the first time in 20 years and one of the brothers was still behind the counter. His hair is now gray, but he otherwise looked the same and his accent was as difficult
The sandwich put me in the mood for more Lebanese food, so last night I fixed a version of the Lebanese national dish, Kibbeh.
Traditionally lamb is pounded in a mortar (called a jorn) until it's a paste. Then onion is similarly treated. The two are then kneaded together with salt, pepper, and bulgur wheat. It's sometimes eaten raw or formed into meatballs and fried. I combined several recipes and came up with this take on it.

Many moons ago -- over 300, as a matter of fact -- I was the manager of Pier 1 Imports here in Knoxville. My favorite lunch spot was a deli just down the street run by a couple of Lebanese brothers. These young men had immigrated to this country and were in the process of gradually moving their family from Lebanon. To accomplish this they both worked from opening at 7:00 am until closing at 1:00 am.
Over the years they sent money home and brought family over who would take their turn working alongside the brothers before moving on -- a constant, if slow, stream of young men and women. The brothers even managed to save enough to buy the building the deli was in and the stretch of tremendously valuable real estate it rested on.
I stopped in there the other night for the first time in 20 years and one of the brothers was still behind the counter. His hair is now gray, but he otherwise looked the same and his accent was as difficult
Girl #1: He was a great cook.
Girl #2: All the lunatics are, my dear.
~ Overheard in New York
The sandwich put me in the mood for more Lebanese food, so last night I fixed a version of the Lebanese national dish, Kibbeh.
Traditionally lamb is pounded in a mortar (called a jorn) until it's a paste. Then onion is similarly treated. The two are then kneaded together with salt, pepper, and bulgur wheat. It's sometimes eaten raw or formed into meatballs and fried. I combined several recipes and came up with this take on it.
Kibbeh
1 lb lamb -- cubed
1 ea onion -- coarsely chopped
4 ea garlic cloves -- sliced
1 tsp ground cumin
1/4 c chopped fresh mint
3/4 c bulgur wheat
salt and pepper
3 tbsp melted butter
Filling
1/2 lb lamb -- cubed
1/2 ea onion -- diced
2 tbsp olive oil
1/2 c pine nuts
1/2 tsp ground allspice
1/4 tsp ground cinnamon
salt and pepper
3 oz feta cheese -- crumbled
Heat oven to 375F.
Finely mince 1 pound lamb of in a food processor and move to a large bowl. Finely mince onion and garlic it the food processor and add to the bowl with the lamb. Rinse bulgur wheat in a sieve, wring out excess water, and add to meat. Add salt and pepper, cumin, and mint and, using your hands knead mixture together adding a bit of water if necessary to form a fairly smooth paste. Set aside.
Mince remaining 1/2 pound lamb. Heat olive oil over medium heat and sauté diced onion until it begins to brown. Increase heat to medium high, add lamb, season with salt and pepper, and brown. Add pine nuts, allspice, cinnamon, and mix thoroughly. Remove from heat.
Press half of kibbeh in the bottom of an 8 x 8 casserole dish. Sprinkle with feta cheese. Distribute cooked lamb mixture over cheese. Top with remaining kibbeh and pat smooth.
Bake for 45 minutes. Serve topped with yogurt mixed with lemon juice and crushed garlic.







17 Comments:
Ali Baba! I love that place, and I love that you live here and bring back memories. I went to high school not too far from there and I remember getting gyros and hummous after basketball games.
The Kibbeh looks amazing, I just wish lamb wasn't one of the few things I don't have a taste for. I try it every year or so, and I'm always sad to find that I still don't care for it.
This looks just fabulous. I've always wondered just what Kibbeh was, thanks.
Marrianne,
You went to Bearden?
As far lamb is concerned, at least you keep trying lamb, although the kibbeh could be made with beef.
Kalyn,
Kibbeh is defined by the mixture and method of preparation, the cooking method can vary.
My mother-in-law is lebanese. I've learned to cook lebanese dishes from her. I've still yet to master the fine art of making kibbeh. A lot of work is put into it. and making it from scratch is a bit daunting for me.
Zita,
I wouldn't make it using the traditional mortar and pestle -- that is saunting. But although the texture isn't perfect using a food processor, it comes a lot closer than using ground lamb.
Hey Kevin: I can't figure out, from your recipe, where the remaining 1/2 lb. lamb (the portion with the pine nuts) goes. (Don't worry about it; this is the kind of dish I pay others to make for me.)
Oh, the flavors sound good.
That does sound really good. I need to eat more lamb ('the other cute meat') and this seems like a good place to start.
Cookiecrumb, isn't that the 'cooked lamb mixture' that gets layered on top of the cheese? (kibbeh, feta, the 1/2lb of cooked lamb, kibben)
Kevin,
I went to Webb, but attended lots of Basketball games at Bearden. My husband, who is older than me, is a Bearden graduate, however.
Don't hate me, but I half-heartedly tagged you here:
http://theunemployedcook.blogspot.com/2006/04/around-world.html
If you aren't into the meme thing, don't worry about it. It took me long enough to get to this one!
Kitchenmage. Duh! Yes! "Cooked lamb mixture."
(Sorry, Kevin. I actually read it through a couple of times. Faultily.)
Ooh. Did you get tornadoed? My pretty?
KM,
"The other cute meat" -- I like it! But what's the other, other cute meat? I also bought a rack of lamb to fix on Easter -- still haven't decided what to do with it yet.
Marianne,
Ah, where the "smart" kids went to school.[g] As for meme, Anne has already tagged me, so I guess having been tagged twice I have to do it.
CC,
You were right, I corrected the recipe after reading your first note.
i also live in west knox...nd love ali baba..a place to buy my grape leave to make home made, i make pita bread and Koosa,kibby, the second part of the lamb goes over the pine nuts.,then cooked. married for 18 years to a Leabanese (second generation man)learned it all from his mother......
Anon,
Yup. Great food.
i just discovered this dish and did a post about it too. your recipe sounds wonderful. next time i'm stuffing mine.
Claudia,
If you like kibbeh you'll like Chapli too.
I love this Knoxville bonding stuff. God bless regional allegiances. Unfortunately for me, my only knowledge of Knoxville is from driving though on I-75.
Made kibbeh today; used ground turkey because there's just no ground lamb at the groceries. Missed the lamb but the kibbeh was real good anyway.
Gihli,
Coincidentally, I made kibbeh last night and this morning drove up to a local butcher shop with my lamb supplier to pick up some freshly butchered lambs, then came home with about 6 pounds of meat for sausage.
I am Lebanese and have never heard of Feta cheese in kibbeh bi sanyneh. Aside from not being authenti....I would not think it would taste good....sorry.
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