From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Eish shamsi
A rural breakfast accompanied by eish baladi and eish shamsi
Type Sourdough
Place of origin Egypt
Region or state Upper Egypt

Eish shamsi ( Egyptian Arabic: عيش شمسي) or Al-Shamsi, is a thick sourdough bread eaten in Egypt made with wheat flour. [1] In Upper Egypt it replaces eish baladi as the local staple, [2] although the latter is common as well. The name, which translates to "sun bread", is thought to derive from the practice of letting the dough rise in the sun. [2] The bread is traditionally baked at home in domed clay ovens with openings at the top, although this tradition is fading with pre-made bread becoming increasingly common. [1]

Shape

Al-Shamsi bread being prepared in West Bank, Luxor

The shape of the bread is determined by the pattern of the scoring, which is done with a needle. [1] The common way to do it is making slits all around the top-edge for a round bread. [1] Another common way to do it is making crescent-shaped slits in the dough which results in a triangle-shaped bread. [1] Christians tend to score the dough in a way that achieves a rough cross-shape. [1] These bread shapes resemble those on depictions of bread offerings on tomb paintings dating back to ancient Egypt. [1] Although it is uncommon in Lower Egypt, some bakeries in Cairo make it especially for their Upper Egyptian clientele. [2]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Weintz, Aurelia. "Shamsi Bread". Slow Food. Slow Food Foundation for Biodiversity. Retrieved 11 March 2018.
  2. ^ a b c El-Behary, Hend (2015). "Al-Shamsi "an ancient" bread still baked in upper Egypt". Egypt Independent. Retrieved 11 March 2018.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Eish shamsi
A rural breakfast accompanied by eish baladi and eish shamsi
Type Sourdough
Place of origin Egypt
Region or state Upper Egypt

Eish shamsi ( Egyptian Arabic: عيش شمسي) or Al-Shamsi, is a thick sourdough bread eaten in Egypt made with wheat flour. [1] In Upper Egypt it replaces eish baladi as the local staple, [2] although the latter is common as well. The name, which translates to "sun bread", is thought to derive from the practice of letting the dough rise in the sun. [2] The bread is traditionally baked at home in domed clay ovens with openings at the top, although this tradition is fading with pre-made bread becoming increasingly common. [1]

Shape

Al-Shamsi bread being prepared in West Bank, Luxor

The shape of the bread is determined by the pattern of the scoring, which is done with a needle. [1] The common way to do it is making slits all around the top-edge for a round bread. [1] Another common way to do it is making crescent-shaped slits in the dough which results in a triangle-shaped bread. [1] Christians tend to score the dough in a way that achieves a rough cross-shape. [1] These bread shapes resemble those on depictions of bread offerings on tomb paintings dating back to ancient Egypt. [1] Although it is uncommon in Lower Egypt, some bakeries in Cairo make it especially for their Upper Egyptian clientele. [2]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Weintz, Aurelia. "Shamsi Bread". Slow Food. Slow Food Foundation for Biodiversity. Retrieved 11 March 2018.
  2. ^ a b c El-Behary, Hend (2015). "Al-Shamsi "an ancient" bread still baked in upper Egypt". Egypt Independent. Retrieved 11 March 2018.

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