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Mongolian Cuisine

Land of the Eternal Blue Sky

Asia East Asia
24 Dishes
6 Categories
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Mongolian cuisine is shaped by the harsh steppe climate and nomadic lifestyle. Mutton, dairy, and simple preparations dominate a cuisine built for survival and sustenance.

A Culinary Portrait

The heritage, flavors, and traditions of Mongolian cuisine

Mongolian cuisine is shaped by one of the most extreme environments inhabited by any food culture: the vast Central Asian steppe, where temperatures swing from scorching summer heat to winter lows of minus forty degrees, and where nomadic herding has sustained life for millennia. The five ancestral animals (tavan khoshuu mal) of sheep, goats, cattle (including yak), horses, and camels provide the foundation of the Mongolian diet. Meat and dairy dominate, reflecting a landscape where crop agriculture was historically impractical across most of the territory. The Mongolian approach to food is utilitarian and deeply respectful: nothing from a slaughtered animal is wasted.

The Mongol Empire under Chinggis Khan and his successors (thirteenth through fourteenth centuries) connected East Asia, Central Asia, Persia, and Europe, exposing Mongolian warriors and traders to diverse food traditions. Chinese influence brought dumplings and noodles, which Mongolians adapted to their meat-centric diet. Tibetan Buddhism, adopted widely from the sixteenth century, introduced ceremonial food practices and a tradition of butter tea.

Soviet influence during the twentieth century added bread, vodka, canned goods, and institutional dining culture, though traditional nomadic foodways persisted in the countryside. Mutton (the primary protein, eaten boiled, steamed, or dried), airag (fermented mare's milk, the national beverage), aaruul (dried curds stored for winter consumption), flour (for dumplings and noodles, adopted from Chinese and Russian influence), and suutei tsai (salted milk tea, consumed throughout the day).

Key Flavors

dried dairy beverage fermented soup dumplings soup comfort food whole animal outdoor cooking fried dessert

Masters of the Kitchen

The chefs who shaped Mongolian cuisine

Gerel Batbayar

Mongolian chef and cookbook author who has documented traditional and authentic…

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Gerel Batbayar

Mongolian chef and cookbook author who has documented traditional and authentic Mongolian recipes passed down through generations of nomadic families.

Essential Reading

The cookbooks that define Mongolian cuisine

Imperial Mongolian Cooking Marc Cramer

Imperial Mongolian Cooking

Marc Cramer · 2001

The first book to explore the ancient culinary traditions of the Mongol empire, with 120 recipes from appetizers to des…

Explore All Dishes

24 authentic recipes from Mongolian cuisine

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Showing 24 of 24 dishes
Aaruul Medium 📜 Story

Aaruul

Dried Curd Cheese

⏱ 3 days 👥 10 servings
vegetarian gluten-free nut-free
Year-round snack, especially during travel
Airag Hard 📜 Story

Airag

Fermented Mare's Milk

⏱ 48 hours 👥 10 servings
gluten-free nut-free vegetarian
Summer beverage, Naadam festival
Banshtai Tsai Medium 📜 Story

Banshtai Tsai

Dumpling Soup with Milk Tea

⏱ 50 min 👥 4 servings
nut-free
Winter breakfast and cold weather meals
Bantan Easy 📜 Story

Bantan

Flour Crumble Soup

⏱ 25 min 👥 4 servings
dairy-free nut-free
When ill, for recovery, or on cold mornings
Boodog Hard 📜 Story

Boodog

Whole Goat Cooked with Hot Stones

⏱ 4 hours 👥 10 servings
dairy-free gluten-free nut-free
Special outdoor celebrations and hunting trips
Boortsog Easy 📜 Story

Boortsog

Fried Butter Cookies

⏱ 40 min 👥 8 servings
vegetarian nut-free
Tsagaan Sar and festive gatherings
Borts Easy 📜 Story

Borts

Air-Dried Meat Strips

⏱ 2 weeks 👥 10 servings
dairy-free gluten-free nut-free
Prepared in late autumn for winter stores
Budaatai Khuurga Easy 📜 Story

Budaatai Khuurga

Fried Rice with Meat

⏱ 25 min 👥 4 servings
dairy-free gluten-free nut-free
Lunch and dinner
Buuz Medium 📜 Story

Buuz

Steamed Dumplings

⏱ 60 min 👥 6 servings
dairy-free
Lunch, dinner, Tsagaan Sar
Chanasan Makh Easy 📜 Story

Chanasan Makh

Boiled Mutton

⏱ 2 hours 👥 6 servings
dairy-free nut-free
Daily dinner, especially in rural areas
Gambir Easy 📜 Story

Gambir

Layered Pancakes

⏱ 30 min 👥 4 servings
nut-free
Breakfast and tea time
Guriltai Shul Easy 📜 Story

Guriltai Shul

Noodle Soup with Mutton

⏱ 40 min 👥 4 servings
dairy-free nut-free
Lunch and dinner daily
Khorkhog Hard 📜 Story

Khorkhog

Hot Stone Lamb

⏱ 90 min 👥 6 servings
gluten-free nut-free
Special occasions, summer gatherings
Khuushuur Medium 📜 Story

Khuushuur

Deep-Fried Meat Pastry

⏱ 45 min 👥 4 servings
dairy-free nut-free
Naadam festival and celebrations
Lamb Khorkhog Hard 📜 Story

Lamb Khorkhog

Hot Stone Lamb Stew

⏱ 2 hours 👥 6 servings
gluten-free dairy-free nut-free
Outdoor gatherings and celebrations
Lavsha Easy 📜 Story

Lavsha

Thin Noodle Soup

⏱ 30 min 👥 4 servings
dairy-free nut-free
Lunch, especially in restaurants and canteens
Niislel Salat Easy 📜 Story

Niislel Salat

Capital City Salad

⏱ 40 min 👥 6 servings
dairy-free gluten-free nut-free
Celebrations, holidays, and party tables
Shimiin Arkhi Hard 📜 Story

Shimiin Arkhi

Mongolian Milk Vodka

⏱ 5 days 👥 10 servings
vegetarian gluten-free nut-free
Celebrations, guest visits, ceremonies
Shorlog Easy 📜 Story

Shorlog

Mongolian Meat Skewers

⏱ 30 min 👥 4 servings
dairy-free gluten-free nut-free
Summer gatherings and outdoor celebrations
Suutei Tsai Easy 📜 Story

Suutei Tsai

Mongolian Salted Milk Tea

⏱ 15 min 👥 4 servings
vegetarian gluten-free nut-free
All day, every day
Tarag Easy 📜 Story

Tarag

Mongolian Yogurt

⏱ 12 hours 👥 6 servings
gluten-free nut-free
Summer dairy season
Tsagaan Idee Hard 📜 Story

Tsagaan Idee

White Food Platter

⏱ 2 days 👥 8 servings
vegetarian gluten-free nut-free
Tsagaan Sar and honored guest reception
Tsuivan Medium 📜 Story

Tsuivan

Stir-Fried Noodles with Meat

⏱ 50 min 👥 4 servings
dairy-free nut-free
Lunch and dinner year-round
Ul Boov Medium 📜 Story

Ul Boov

Shoe Sole Cake

⏱ 2 hours 👥 10 servings
vegetarian nut-free
Tsagaan Sar (Lunar New Year)