CHI KOFTE TWO WAYS! | ARMENIAN STEAK TARTARE

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 16 окт 2024
  • Chi Kofte is a type of steak tartare made with bulgur. This recipe video shows you how to make two types, one with very little bulgur and one that is very bulgur forward. Try them both out to see which you like best!
    Find us on Instagram: @achki.chop
    Find us on Facebook: bit.ly/3gV2RsP
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Ingredients:
    Chi Kofte #1
    ¼ cup bulgur, #1 or fine
    ¼ cup water
    ¼ white onion, minced
    ½ cup extra virgin olive oil (split into: meat mixture, grease dish, and topping)
    1 tsp. dried basil
    2 tbsp. pepper paste
    1 tsp. Aleppo pepper
    1 tsp. salt
    1 lb. chikofte meat (very finely ground top round, fat trimmed)
    Ice water
    Chi Kofte #2
    1 cup bulgur, #1 or fine
    1 cup water
    ½ onion
    ½ cup extra virgin olive oil (split into: meat mixture, grease dish, and topping)
    1 tsp. dried basil
    3 tbsp. pepper paste
    1 tsp. Aleppo pepper
    1 tsp. salt
    1 tsp. cayenne
    1 lb. top round/top sirloin/London broil, cut into 1in. Pieces
    Ice water
    Toppings:
    Italian flat leaf parsley, chopped
    Chopped green onion
    White onion, finely chopped
    Toasted pine nuts
    Extra virgin olive oil
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Stock Media provided by Soundbeatproductions / Pond5
    Stock Media provided by Sound_background / Pond5
    #Chikofte #Tartare #SteakTartare #CigKofte #ArmenianTartare #Bulgur #KibbehNayyeh #LebaneseFood #ArmenianFood #Recipe #AchkiChop #Armenian #MiddleEasternFood #HomemadeRecipe

Комментарии • 37

  • @craigbrown5359
    @craigbrown5359 9 месяцев назад +1

    Most outstanding...I played soccer at a German club and they made a raw meat sandwich with raw beef, a slice of onion, butter, salt, pepper, on rye...it was delicious as I am sure your recipe is!!!

  • @organchoirman9698
    @organchoirman9698 2 года назад +1

    Excellent. We always serve this the second way you made it. I grind my own meat with the grinder attachment on my mixer...it has to be chilled first and I grind it three times...coarse twice and fine the third time. Thanks for sharing your version.

  • @sjmsark
    @sjmsark 3 года назад +6

    Never heard of dry basil in chi kofte. We always have used salt, black pepper and most importantly cumin. Interesting.

    • @organchoirman9698
      @organchoirman9698 2 года назад +2

      same here...but very little else than salt and pepper.

  • @karmendemirchyan3147
    @karmendemirchyan3147 2 года назад +1

    I really love your videos!

  • @karmendemirchyan3147
    @karmendemirchyan3147 2 года назад +2

    I made your eech and it was delicious. But I didn’t know you add basil to chi kofte.

    • @achkichop
      @achkichop  2 года назад

      Adding basil is definitely not traditional, but adds a nice touch.

  • @elizabethc3629
    @elizabethc3629 Год назад +1

    You don’t put pine nuts, tomato paste, cumin, basil in the traditional chi kufte. You only put red pepper powder, parsley, salt, olive oil, fine chopped onion. Armenians from west Armenia “yetesia” currently Urfa shape it in small portion mixing the fine chopped parsley, fine chopped🧅, fine bulgur, red pepper powder, salt, they mix it well together then with ice water they shape it with their hand. However , the Lebanese Armenians make it flat and garnish it with parsley green onion and onion around the meat, and some like to garnish it with pine nuts on the top and olive oil at the end before serving it. It always served cold. I learned to put the fine bulgur and mix it with red pepper and fine chopped onions in ziplock and freeze it ahead of time before making chi kufte. Bon appétit.

  • @levongeorge6677
    @levongeorge6677 Год назад +1

    Can you please also make cheese ddmach, it is also called Armenian cheese boreg 😊

    • @achkichop
      @achkichop  Год назад +1

      Yes cheese boreg recipe coming soon!

    • @levongeorge6677
      @levongeorge6677 Год назад

      @@achkichop looking forward to your recipe for panrov ddmach 😊, thnx

  • @maralphayer501
    @maralphayer501 3 года назад +1

    Basil ??

  • @karmendemirchyan3147
    @karmendemirchyan3147 2 года назад

    Do you use filet mignon?

    • @achkichop
      @achkichop  2 года назад

      We used top round, but you could potentially use a lean cut of filet. You don’t really want fat in your chikofte.

  • @ARMOARMANI
    @ARMOARMANI Месяц назад

    🇦🇲🇦🇲

  • @violetgaribyan-jg9ll
    @violetgaribyan-jg9ll 10 месяцев назад +1

    🥬💐🥘👍🏻

  • @elenikali9545
    @elenikali9545 3 года назад

    I never heard tomato paste and mint basil no cumin

  • @xloyanv8428
    @xloyanv8428 2 года назад

    inch sirun Hay axchika , ta Astvac otari pay chdarna, Hay entaniq kazmi

    • @GeneralWinter9
      @GeneralWinter9 Год назад +1

      Aper don't worry she is probably already married to a armenian

  • @mc_ely0144
    @mc_ely0144 6 месяцев назад

    Its Turkish the Original…Ciğ köfte means raw meat bulette on Turkish and the same by Dolma/Sarma Sarma Dolma means filling on Turkish 🇹🇷🇹🇷🇹🇷

  • @medinahajiyeva1912
    @medinahajiyeva1912 Год назад +1

    And the oskar goes to national Armenian dish "Steal from neighbours and present as ours". Glory to national Turkish cuisine Çiy Köfte!

    • @ARMOARMANI
      @ARMOARMANI Месяц назад

      Keep dreaming its Armenian 🇦🇲🥰😘

  • @LELOOSHIAN
    @LELOOSHIAN 2 года назад +1

    These are Armenian dishes with Turkish names from Ottoman years, but why don’t we try using the Armenian names to all these dishes?
    It’s so annoying to see these Armenian dishes with Turkish names. Does anyone of you ever think about it before taping these food shows? I’m sure if you don’t know their Armenian names, it’s would be very easy and simple to ask someone who knows.

    • @theselector4733
      @theselector4733 Год назад +2

      What's the name of this dish in Armenian?

    • @DevletGM
      @DevletGM Год назад +1

      These are all Turkish none of them are Armenian, Armenian cuisine is limited to Kash.

  • @kentishtowncomputer
    @kentishtowncomputer 2 года назад +2

    Just to add some more information. Cig Kofte means Raw Meatball in Turkish.

    • @somedudestolemyname
      @somedudestolemyname 2 года назад +4

      both of those words come from Farsi, not turkish. Also, no one cares. the dish is Armenian

    • @kentishtowncomputer
      @kentishtowncomputer 2 года назад

      ​@@somedudestolemyname The whole world knows that the origin of Cig Kofte is Arabic and that Turkish language has many Persian words. Cig is a Turkish word while Kofte is a persian word. Armenians have an ethnicity crises. Armenians lived among Arabs and Turks and adopted many Muslim dishes. Otherwise these dishes have nothing to do with Armenia and Armenians. The narrow minded fascist ideology of right wing Armenians destroyed Armenia so bad that they lost half of their army against Azerbaijan. Armenia was claiming that they were winning the war until they surrendered shortly after. The state of Armenia is completely corrupt and the diaspora in the US is even worse. Armenia is now a Russian puppet third world country disliked by all its neighbours.

    • @somedudestolemyname
      @somedudestolemyname 2 года назад

      @@kentishtowncomputer lol, turks arabs and iranians didn't invent tartare, and they're not the first to make raw meat balls. cry on someone else's lap.

    • @LELOOSHIAN
      @LELOOSHIAN 2 года назад +3

      Hey Akisha! Keep your information to yourself! You’re not telling us anything new. These dishes are all Armenian, and happens to have Turkish names simply because they were developed by Armenian chefs during the Ottoman era. Most of the chefs at the Palaces for security reasons were Armenians also with Turkish names. In those days that was the reality of an intolerant society.

    • @1907fan
      @1907fan 2 года назад

      You are right. It's TURKISH. :)

  • @nigulitta13
    @nigulitta13 Год назад +3

    Armenian dish? 😂 But somehow the name is Turkish right? Why you like to be laughed at? Same goes to Dolma which is Azerbaijani meal name and to all other your lies. You don’t have respect for yourself.

    • @ARMOARMANI
      @ARMOARMANI Месяц назад

      Its Tolma and its Armenian 🇦🇲😘

  • @мухиттинбозанкая
    @мухиттинбозанкая 2 месяца назад

    NOT CHI, YOU CAN TRY CIG Kofte, TURKISH FOOD AND EVEN MEZZE

  • @haroutkhatch104
    @haroutkhatch104 6 месяцев назад

    Honestly if can do this at your age n in the times ww live in maladets kezi. Let ppl learn how to cook