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sev gundig~the seed


onjig

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Do you know if the Nigella seed they sell here on Ebay and Amazon is Sev Gundig, the black seed we use in chorag and banir?

 

Thank you

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A Twist and a Surprise: Armenian String Cheese

THE CHEESEMONGER

The obvious choice cheese-wise for lunch is a piece of shrink-wrapped string cheese. Pretty mundane. In the spirit of keeping with http://p-fst1.pixstatic.com/525480e0697ab04ed60057ac._w.540_h.371_s.fit_.jpg

This string cheese is a pasta filata, meaning "pulled curd," cheese, and is madejust like mozzarella, like any American-style string cheese. Curds become elastic when heated, and then they are then stretched, pulled, and twisted into a rope, and doubled over itself.

http://p-fst1.pixstatic.com/525480e1dbfa3f1779005916._w.540_h.360_s.fit_.jpg

This special version is made from pasteurized cow milk, and along with a speckle of black caraway seeds throughout, there is one other unique addition: mahlab, the ground seed of an Iranian variety of sour cherry. Mahlab is a spice used in Middle Eastern and Mediterranean cuisine, particularly in breads and baked goods.

You'll taste the caraway seeds more than anything, but don't expect a straight-up caraway flavor; these black seeds taste surprisingly like cumin. Very savory and unique. Tasting very much like mozzarella, with a bit higher acidity and a pleasantly squeaky chew, in a lunchbox it would be most welcome. But perhaps this twisted cheese may feel most comfortable on a meze platter, among olives, pita bread, and other Mediterranean snacks.

There is one trick to stringing the cheese into the longest threads possible. Don't start stringing while the cheese is still twisted! Untwist the entire rope first, which is more easily done without breaking if the cheese is at room temperature. Twist each end in opposite directions and wiggle the ends around and through the center to unknot. Then just channel your inner grade-schooler and start pulling the cheese apart into strings. If serving for a group, you can leave the cheese in various widths, so that people can partake in the stringing.

This cheese originates in the the Armenian town of Aleppo (or "Halaby" in Arabic), but most that I've seen are made state-side by Armenian producers. It's sold in pieces that weigh about three-quarters of a pound, and when strung, make quite a hefty pile.

Armenian string cheese can be found at Middle Eastern markets and atParthenon Foods for $7.99 each.

Related: Favorite Lunch Recipe: Tomato Mozzarella Sandwich

Nora Singley is an avid lover of cheese, and for some time she was a Cheesemonger and the Director of Education at Murray's Cheese Shop in New York City, where she continues to teach cheese classes for the public. She is currently an assistant chef on The Martha Stewart Show.

(Images: Nora Singley)

Edited by Yervant1
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Thanks, I just, yesterday, made cheese but our supply of sev gundig is back in the mountains. I don't agree that the cheese originated in Halab.

 

I saw on the internet some use the nigella seed, just wonder if it is the very one we use, we can get it on line, for next time.

Edited by onjig
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