Musakhan

Musakhan

مسخن (moo-SAH-khan)

Sumac Chicken on Flatbread

Prep Time 1.5 hours
📈 Difficulty Medium
👥 Servings
6
🔥 Calories 544 kcal

Roasted chicken draped over taboon bread and smothered with caramelized onions stained purple with sumac and drenched in olive oil. This ancient dish delivers waves of tangy, earthy flavor in every oil-soaked bite.

Nutrition & Info

550 kcal per serving
Protein 35.0g
Carbs 38.0g
Fat 28.0g
Protein Carbs Fat

Dietary

dairy-free

Allergen Warnings

⚠ gluten

Equipment Needed

large skillet baking sheet roasting pan

Presentation Guide

Vessel: large platter lined with bread

Garnishes: toasted pine nuts, fresh sumac

Accompaniments: pickles, yogurt

Instructions

  1. 1

    Season chicken pieces generously with sumac, allspice, cinnamon, cumin, salt, and pepper. Let marinate for at least 30 minutes.

  2. 2

    Heat half the olive oil in a large skillet. Cook sliced onions over medium-low heat for 25-30 minutes, stirring occasionally, until deeply caramelized and jammy.

  3. 3

    Stir remaining sumac and cardamom into the onions in the last few minutes of cooking. The onions should turn a deep purple-red color from the sumac.

  4. 4

    Place flatbreads on baking sheets. Spread a thick layer of the sumac-onion mixture over each bread, covering the entire surface.

  5. 5

    Arrange marinated chicken pieces on top of the onion-covered bread. Drizzle with remaining olive oil and scatter pine nuts around.

  6. 6

    Roast at 200C for 35-40 minutes until chicken is cooked through with crispy golden skin and the bread edges are crisped. Serve the whole platter family-style.

💡

Did You Know?

Musakhan was traditionally made during the olive harvest season as a celebration of the new olive oil pressing, using the freshest oil of the year.

Chef's Notes

Equipment Tips

  • large skillet
  • baking sheet
  • roasting pan

Garnishing

toasted pine nuts, fresh sumac

Accompaniments

pickles, yogurt

The Story Behind Musakhan

Musakhan is one of the oldest dishes in the Jordanian and Palestinian culinary traditions, deeply tied to the olive harvest that defines the agricultural calendar. The dish is essentially a celebration of olive oil, using it in quantities that would seem extravagant elsewhere but are perfectly natural in this olive-growing region. The combination of sumac-stained onions and slow-roasted chicken on fresh taboon bread represents the heart of rural Jordanian cooking, where simplicity and quality ingredients create extraordinary flavor.

🕐 Traditionally enjoyed lunch, olive harvest celebration 📜 Origins: Ancient Palestinian-Jordanian

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