al-Hasani
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This i have tried. This used to come from a somali doctor's home at iftaar. he was doing atakaaf with me some years ago.
Yes, East African (Horn of Africa) cuisine has a lot similarities with Yemeni cuisine due to Yemeni influences and also because that part of Africa was part of the ancient Indian Ocean/Arabian Sea trade. Ethiopian and Somalian cuisine are really great. It's a hybrid cuisine. They also got Italian influences due to them once being under Italian influence - Italian colonies. But once again those are not that well-known cuisines but I prefer them over many of the exposed and "boring" ME cuisines.
I often eat at Somali restaurants and never regret it, LOL.
Start a thread on it .
@al-Hasani Great thread . post more pics with food description . And i never knew yemen has such vast sea food dishes . In quite a few Indian dishes if we remove "extra spices" they will be quite similar to yemeni food . Post more .
Yes, told you about the many similarities. If you look at Arab cuisine from other Arab countries those similarities are much smaller. That's once again due to that ancient Indian Ocean/Arabian Sea trade that they were not a part of and due to the close geographic proximity. Many Indians or South Asians who have tried Yemeni cuisine notice that as well. What I like is that they don't overdue with the spices either as some spicy cuisines do for me. For instance some Indian food is simply too hot even for me. That destroys the dish because you can only taste the hot spices.
What is also used in Southern Yemen is coconut milk. Mostly in the border region with Oman. Coconut milk and rice is perfect to "cool down" spicy food or ingredients. But you know that as an India where you use it a lot especially in the South.
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