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Iraqi Cuisine
Cradle of Civilization's Kitchen
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Iraqi cuisine is one of the world's oldest culinary traditions, rooted in ancient Mesopotamia. Rich kebabs, aromatic rice dishes, and slow-cooked stews showcase flavors refined over millennia.
A Culinary Portrait
The heritage, flavors, and traditions of Iraqi cuisine
Iraqi cuisine is the direct descendant of Mesopotamian cooking, the oldest documented culinary tradition on Earth. Clay tablets from ancient Babylon, dating to approximately 1700 BCE, contain recipes for stews, broths, and roasted meats that bear recognizable similarities to dishes still prepared in Iraqi kitchens today. The fertile crescent between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers gave humanity wheat, barley, dates, and the earliest forms of animal husbandry, making Iraq the birthplace of agriculture itself.
Successive empires layered their flavors onto this ancient foundation. The Abbasid Caliphate, with its capital in Baghdad during the eighth through thirteenth centuries, presided over an extraordinary golden age of cuisine, where court cooks documented elaborate recipes combining meat with dried fruits, nuts, saffron, and rosewater.
The Mongol sack of Baghdad in 1258 devastated the city but did not extinguish its food culture. Ottoman rule introduced grilled kebabs and layered pastries, while Persian influence from the east contributed rice pilaf techniques, dried lime (noomi basra), and the sweet-sour flavor profile that distinguishes Iraqi cooking from its neighbors. Noomi basra (dried black limes, the signature Iraqi souring agent), baharat (a warm spice blend of cinnamon, cardamom, clove, and black pepper), saffron (used in rice dishes and festive preparations), date syrup (a natural sweetener produced from Iraq's legendary date palms), and sumac (a tart, berry-red seasoning for salads and grilled meats).
Successive empires layered their flavors onto this ancient foundation. The Abbasid Caliphate, with its capital in Baghdad during the eighth through thirteenth centuries, presided over an extraordinary golden age of cuisine, where court cooks documented elaborate recipes combining meat with dried fruits, nuts, saffron, and rosewater.
The Mongol sack of Baghdad in 1258 devastated the city but did not extinguish its food culture. Ottoman rule introduced grilled kebabs and layered pastries, while Persian influence from the east contributed rice pilaf techniques, dried lime (noomi basra), and the sweet-sour flavor profile that distinguishes Iraqi cooking from its neighbors. Noomi basra (dried black limes, the signature Iraqi souring agent), baharat (a warm spice blend of cinnamon, cardamom, clove, and black pepper), saffron (used in rice dishes and festive preparations), date syrup (a natural sweetener produced from Iraq's legendary date palms), and sumac (a tart, berry-red seasoning for salads and grilled meats).
Amba Iraqiya
Salata Meshwiya
Key Flavors
condiment
fermented
grilled
salad
rice
saffron
Masters of the Kitchen
The chefs who shaped Iraqi cuisine
Nawal Nasrallah
Iraqi-born food historian, cookbook author, and scholar of medieval Arab cuisinโฆ
Click to read moreEssential Reading
The cookbooks that define Iraqi cuisine
Delights from the Garden of Eden
Delights from the Garden of Eden
A comprehensive cookbook and culinary history of Iraq tracing its cuisine from ancient Mesopotamia to the present day, โฆ
The Iraqi Cookbook
The Iraqi Cookbook
A collection of traditional Iraqi recipes bringing the flavors of Baghdad and beyond to home kitchens worldwide.
Explore All Dishes
3 authentic recipes from Iraqi cuisine
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