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🌍 Middle Eastern Cuisine

Culinary traditions of the Levant, Arabian Peninsula, Turkey, and Iran, sharing mezze, kebab, and flatbread traditions

Geographic
88 Recipe Types
8 Sub-cuisines

Definition

Middle Eastern cuisine encompasses the culinary traditions of a broad geographic arc stretching from the eastern Mediterranean shores of the Levant through Anatolia, the Arabian Peninsula, Mesopotamia, and the Iranian plateau. As a macro-regional tradition, it is among the oldest continuously documented food cultures in the world, with written records of recipes and agricultural practices dating to ancient Mesopotamia. Its foundational identity rests on a shared pantry of wheat, legumes, lamb, olive oil, and aromatic spices, bound together by common meal structures and social customs that have crossed political and ethnic boundaries for millennia.\n\nThe cuisine is organized around the principle of communal abundance: the table (*sufra* in Arabic, *sofrehye* in Persian) is understood as a site of hospitality and social cohesion. Mezze (small shared plates), flatbreads baked in clay ovens or on convex griddles, and grilled or slow-braised meats constitute the backbone of daily and festive eating across the region. Flavor principles lean toward the interplay of sour (sumac, tamarind, pomegranate molasses, yogurt), herbaceous (parsley, mint, za'atar), and warm-spiced (cumin, coriander, cinnamon, allspice) profiles, with marked variation by sub-region. While no single cuisine can be abstracted from this diversity, these shared threads — ingredient repertoire, meal structure, and the ethics of hospitality — give the macro-region its scholarly coherence.

Historical Context

The roots of Middle Eastern cuisine lie in the Fertile Crescent, where the Neolithic agricultural revolution produced the world's first cultivated cereals and domesticated livestock approximately 10,000 BCE. Ancient Sumerian and Babylonian cuneiform tablets, including the Yale Culinary Tablets (c. 1700 BCE), contain the earliest known written recipes, documenting stews and broths that structurally resemble preparations still found in modern Iraqi and Syrian cooking. Successive empires — Assyrian, Achaemenid Persian, Hellenistic, Roman, Byzantine, and Sassanid — each left imprints on regional foodways through trade, administrative integration, and cultural exchange.\n\nThe consolidation of Islam from the 7th century CE onward created a vast, interconnected culinary civilization stretching from Iberia to Central Asia, facilitating the movement of ingredients (citrus, saffron, rice, sugarcane) and culinary techniques along existing trade networks. The Abbasid court in Baghdad (8th–13th centuries) was a crucible of gastronomic refinement, producing influential culinary manuscripts such as the *Kitāb al-Ṭabīkh* of al-Warraq and Ibn Sayyār. Ottoman imperial cuisine (14th–20th centuries) subsequently synthesized Anatolian, Arab, and Persian traditions into a prestige culinary canon that still shapes the fine-dining registers of Turkey, Lebanon, and the Arab Gulf states today.

Geographic Scope

Middle Eastern cuisine is actively practiced across the Levant (Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, Palestine, Israel), Turkey, Egypt, Iraq, Iran, the Arabian Peninsula (Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Oman, Kuwait, UAE, Qatar, Bahrain), and among substantial diaspora communities in Western Europe, North America, Latin America, and sub-Saharan Africa.

References

  1. Nasrallah, N. (2007). Annals of the Caliphs' Kitchens: Ibn Sayyār al-Warraq's Tenth-Century Baghdadi Cookbook. Brill.academic
  2. Zubaida, S., & Tapper, R. (Eds.). (1994). Culinary Cultures of the Middle East. I.B. Tauris.academic
  3. UNESCO. (2016). Lavash, the preparation, meaning and appearance of traditional bread as an expression of culture in Armenia. Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity.cultural
  4. Bottéro, J. (2004). The Oldest Cuisine in the World: Cooking in Mesopotamia. University of Chicago Press.academic

Sub-cuisines

Recipe Types (88)