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Food PDF Print E-mail
Written by Chris   
Monday, 02 October 2006

Mongolia is known as the Land of Five Animals--sheep, goats, cattle, horses, and camels. The main meats are mutton(Lonely Planet states that the "smell permeates everything" and that after foreigners have visited they say "it takes weeks to get ride of that mutton smell") and beef. In the cities shops sell: beef, hamburger, smoked hammocks, sausages, hot dogs, and chicken. "The Mongol chickens have been described as 'very athletic'."

Drinks
The main drinks are tea, milk, airag (fermented mare's milk) and vodka. Guests are always served tea first. The Mongolians drink milk tea with salt. Sometimes the tea is cooked with rice, dumplings and flour. Airag is probably the most favorite drink of the Mongolians. Airag is generously served at weddings, big parties and ceremonies. Airiag, the fermented mare's milk, has three times more Vitamin C than cow's milk. To make airag from mare's milk, put it into a hohuur (a big leather bag made from cow's skin) and beat it until it gets fermented. It is usually ready the next day.
Airiag is further fermented to make shimiin arkhi (milk vodka).


Diary
Traditional Mongolian food has got many kinds of dairy products: aaruul (dried curd), cheese, cottage cheese and others.
To make aaruul, dried curd, milk is boiled with some fermented cheese, and then the mass is cut into pieces or put into forms and dried on special plates. There is different technology to make Mongolian cheese and yogurt.


Meat
Meat has always been an important ingredient of the Mongolian food. In order to keep the meat for long period of time, it is smoked by keeping the meat above the smoke of burning dried dung. Meat is also dried in the open air and then used for cooking.
There are several kinds of meat dishes. For instance, depending on the part of the animal body the meat is taken from, the meat is called turag makh (meat), dotor meat, tolgoi and shiir. Turag meat is the meat of the animal body; dotor makh from the is heart, stomach, kidney and lungs of an animal. Meat is served in different styles: it can be filling for dumplings, the main ingredient of soups, or it can just be boiled and served.
Boodog is one of the delicacies. For making boodog the goat meat or mutton is cut into pieces and cooked in an animal skin from the inside out, by placing hot rocks inside.


The are a number of restaurant that serve a wide variety of international meals including Korean, Japanese, Chinese, French, Italian, English, and Latin America. Most of the old restaurant serve typical Russian food, and this type of meal is also common in the base camps in the countryside. Mongolian special ceremonial meals, Boodog og Horhog can be served on order.

The city of Ulaanbaatar is offering more variety, but in the countryside only mutton, yak, horsemeat, beef, and camelmeat are available

Last Updated ( Monday, 02 October 2006 )
 

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Matching stripped hat and scarve
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