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Keshkek: A 3,000-Year-Old Bowl of Warmth, History, & Flavor

Keshkek, the ancient porridge of Mesapotamia

Keshkek, the ancient porridge of Mesapotamia

If you haven’t noticed already, I love bringing back ancient dishes that have survived the test of time! There’s something magical about a dish that has survived millennia — something that carries with it memory, ritual, nourishment, and simplicity. Keshkek (sometimes spelled kashkak, keşkek, or regional variants) is one such dish. It’s a  humble fusion of grain and meat, slow-cooked until it becomes creamy, hearty, and deeply satisfying. 

In many cultures across Anatolia, Iran, the Caucasus, and parts of the Levant, keshkek is a ceremonial, communal food with roots reaching deep into antiquity. Though the precise origin is contested, many food historians trace keshkek back to ancient Mesopotamian and Near Eastern grain-meat porridges. In 2011 UNESCO put Keshkek on the list of cultural heritage dishes, and until today. it’s served during special occasions from weddings to religious festivals. 

Three thousand years ago, Mesopotamia was a grain and livestock society. Wheat, barley, and characteristic stews were central to daily life. Today Turkish people favor the farro variety of wheat to make this dish. Farro is one of the older domesticated wheats, and aligns well conceptually with a dish invoked as “ancient.” Farro absorbs all of the flavors without being bland. In the traditional ritual version, the wheat is soaked, often blessed, then cooked overnight in large cauldrons over fire. The dish is tribal, with many members of the community participating in crushing, soaking, and cooking the wheat in large cauldrons.

Keshkek is about layering simplicity into richness. When made correctly, it is silky and velvety, with a gentle bite from the farro. The grain brings natural sweetness and earthiness; the slow cooking with meat (chicken, lamb, or mutton) infuses depth. The sauce is buttery and smoky from the paprika.  In a bowl, keshkek is like a hug: warm, steady, and sustaining.

When I visited Chef Omer at Meyhouse restaurant in Palo Alto, I was excited (and a little skeptical)  to learn that a dish so ceremonial and slow could  really be made in a home kitchen! However, with a few shortcuts, respect, and patience this dish can be created in under an hour. To see his easy technique that you can replicate in your kitchen, watch the video below:

CHEF TIPS:

KESHKEK (COURTESY OF CHEF OMER ARTUN, MEYHOUSE RESTAURANT, PALO ALTO)

INGREDIENTS:

METHOD:

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