Mehshi means stuffed, any stuffed vegetable is called “Mehshi”. Mehshi Al-Bathenjan is stuffed eggplants and Mehshi Al-Kousa is stuffed vegetable marrows. The filling is prepared from rice, meat mixed with sheep\/lamb tail fat “liyeh”, tomato paste, salt and black pepper, then the stuffed vegetables are cooked in tomato sauce.<\/span><\/p>\n Let’s make Mehshi Al-Bathenjan and Mehshi Al-Kousa: Before talking about the method of cooking Mehshi Al-Bathenjan and Mehshi Al-Kousa, I\u2019ll tell you some information about two things.<\/span><\/p>\n 1. Squash Corer<\/span><\/p>\n This utensil is called \u201cSyrian Munara\u201d or \u201cSquash corer\u201d, we use it for Mehshi Al-Bathenjan and Mehshi Al-Kousa. 2. Stainless Steel Pot Lid (I will give it the name “Flat Lid”) This lid is needed for the technique of cooking “Mehshi”, anything looks like this lid works fine, just try to find something similar to it <\/span>but should be stainless steel<\/span>. I have two sizes a big one and small one as you can see in the picture, I will not use both of them, you will know more in the rest of the post.<\/span><\/p>\n Let’s make Mehshi Al-Bathenjan and Mehshi Al-Kousa:<\/span><\/p>\n 1, 2. You can see in the picture long and thin eggplants, choose long eggplants that each approximately 3.5 – 4.5 inches (8.9 – 11.4 cm) long, then rinse eggplants with water and drain.<\/span><\/p>\n 3. Remove the hat of the eggplants. 4, 5. Cut off the stem of the eggplants as you see in the picture.<\/span><\/p>\n 6, 7, 8. Cut a small piece from the top of the eggplants to have a diameter of the top part of the eggplant equal to 3\/4 – 1 inch (1.9 – 2.5 cm). <\/span><\/p>\n <\/span><\/p>\n 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15. Hollow eggplants from one end with the squash corer leaving about 1\/16 inch (0.06 cm) thick shell all around , and be careful to leave one end of eggplant intact, if you don\u2019t have squash corer try to use apple corer.<\/span><\/p>\n 16. This is the final result.<\/span><\/p>\n <\/span><\/p>\n 17. Set aside. \n 18, 19. You can see in the picture vegetable marrows (marrow squash), choose vegetable marrows that each approximately 3 – 3.5 inches (7.6 – 8.9 cm) long, then rinse vegetable marrows with water and drain.<\/span><\/p>\n 20, 21, 22. Cut off the stem of the vegetable marrows as you see in the picture.<\/span><\/p>\n 24, 25. Use a knife to remove the round caps at the ends of the vegetable marrows as you see in the picture.<\/span><\/p>\n <\/span><\/p>\n <\/span><\/p>\n 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32. Hollow vegetable marrows from one end with the squash corer leaving about 1\/12 inch (0.08 cm) thick shell all around , and be careful to leave one end of vegetable marrow intact, if you don\u2019t have squash corer try to use apple corer.<\/span><\/p>\n 33. This is the final result.<\/span><\/p>\n 34. Set aside.<\/span><\/p>\n Filling<\/span><\/p>\n 35. In the bowl, you can see fat free lamb meat, and Sheep\/Lamb tail fat, in Syria the sheep\/lamb tail fat is called “Liyeh”. 36. <\/span>Prepare meat grinder, attach the fine holed plate.<\/span><\/p>\n 37, 38. Grind the meat and the liyeh together, and set aside. 39. This is Egyptian rice.<\/span><\/p>\n 40. Rinse rice with cold water in several changes.<\/span><\/p>\n 41. Bring water to boil.<\/span><\/p>\n 42. Soak rice in boiled water for 10 minutes, then drain and rinse with cold water in several changes.<\/span><\/p>\n 43. To rice, add the mixture of ground meat and liyeh.<\/span><\/p>\n 44. Add salt and black pepper, don’t add salt directly to rice, but add it directly to the mixture of meat and liyeh. 45. Add tomato paste.<\/span><\/p>\n 46. Mix until combine, and set aside in the refrigerator. <\/span><\/p>\n For Soaking Vegetables<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n 47. In a bowl, add water, crushed garlic, dried mint and salt.<\/span><\/p>\n 48. Soak eggplants in this water for 10 minutes. 49, 50. After 10 minutes, shake eggplants and get rid of excess water from the inside of the eggplant, then set aside.<\/span><\/p>\n <\/span><\/p>\n 51. After you finish from the eggplants, do the same with vegetable marrows, soak in the water for 10 minutes. 52, 53. <\/span> After 10 minutes, shake vegetable marrows to rid of excess water from the inside of the vegetable marrows, then set aside.<\/span><\/p>\n 54. After you finish all the eggplants and vegetable marrows, keep the water in the bowl and don’t discard it, we will use this water later. They are ready to be stuffed.<\/span><\/p>\n 55, 56, 57. <\/span>Stuff eggplants with the filling fully to brim.<\/span><\/p>\n 58, 59, 60. After that, press the eggplant slightly using your thumb and index and run your fingers from bottom up to top to remove excess rice.<\/span><\/p>\n 61. Excess rice return them to the bowl of the filling. \n <\/span><\/p>\n 62. Set aside. <\/span><\/p>\n <\/span><\/p>\n 63, 64, 65, 66, 67. <\/span>Stuff vegetable marrows with the filling to the half of the vegetable marrow only,\u00a0 and press inside the vegetable marrow using your finger, for example if the vegetable marrow is 3.1 inch (8 cm) long, so you fill up to 1.55 inch (4 cm). 68, 69. You can notice from the picture how they are filled.<\/span><\/p>\n 70. Set aside. 71. The water (water, crushed garlic, dried mint and salt) that was used to soak the vegetables, now we need it, strain it.<\/span><\/p>\n 72. Keep the water and set aside.<\/span><\/p>\n Tomato Sauce<\/span> 73. To prepare tomato sauce, in a pot, put water and tomato paste.<\/span><\/p>\n 74. Heat the tomato sauce, don’t boil. 75. Meanwhile, prepare a large deep pot, and arrange tablespoons on the bottom of the pot (it doesn’t matter how they are arranged, try any way you are comfortable with,\u00a0 also <\/span>6 tablespoons were good for the size of my pot).<\/span><\/p>\n 76. <\/span>Add the flat lid over the tablespoons (I used the large pot lid because the size is perfect for my pot). The tablespoons and the pot lid work as a protection for the stuffed vegetables<\/span>; to prevent the direct contact between the stuffed vegetables and the heat.<\/span><\/p>\n 77, 78. Arrange the eggplants first, <\/span>in the same way as you see in the picture<\/span><\/p>\n <\/span><\/p>\n 79, 80. Arrange the vegetable marrows over the eggplants, in the same way as you see in the picture. 81. <\/span>Put a plate over the<\/span> <\/span>stuffed vegetable <\/span>marrows.<\/span><\/p>\n 82. Add 500 ml of the water that was saved in steps 71, 72. 82, 83. Add hot tomato sauce.<\/span><\/p>\n 85. <\/span>Add a heavy thing over the plate, sometimes I use a piece of marble, but here I used a pot filled with water, <\/span> (actually there is a special tool to be used for mehshi, but mine is broken).<\/span><\/p>\n 86. Keep on high heat until it starts to boil. 87. Once the sauce is boiling vigorously, remove the heavy thing but keep the plate.<\/span><\/p>\n 88. <\/span>Lower the heat, and taste if you need salt so you can add salt, cover the pot and cook for 2 hours.<\/span><\/p>\n 89. After 2 hours, time to serve, <\/span> I use “pot strainer” to help me to pour out the sauce through the strainer, save the sauce to serve with mehshi.<\/span><\/p>\n 90. Transfer mehshi to a plate one by one, keep with you a bowl with cold water, wet your hand then each time take mehshi and transfer to a plate, cold water helps you to handle the hot mehshi. 91. After you finish from vegetable marrows, do the same thing with the eggplants.<\/span><\/p>\n 92, 93, 94. Serve hot with tomato sauce and Arabic flat bread. <\/span><\/p>\n <\/span><\/p>\n <\/span><\/p>\n <\/span><\/p>\n From: <\/span>Family Recipe<\/span> \/ Servings: 10 People<\/span><\/span><\/span><\/span>
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\nMehshi Al-Bathenjan and Mehshi Al-Kousa<\/span><\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n
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