释义 |
Definition of tagine in English: tagine(also tajine) nountəˈdʒiːntəˈʒiːn 1A North African stew of spiced meat and vegetables prepared by slow cooking in a shallow earthenware cooking dish with a tall, conical lid. 塔金(北非一道用调好味的肉加蔬菜炖煮的菜肴,用带有高锥形盖子的浅砂锅以文火炖煮) Example sentencesExamples - But, like most stews, tagines generally need to simmer too long to be put together after work.
- You then share a Brasilian plate of two empenadas (baked turnovers, one beef and one sardine), red beans, salad and salsa, and the plat du jour, a lamb tajine, deliciously spiced.
- Once the table is cleared, large tagines of lamb or beef, or chicken, or all three arrive with the omnipresent peak of steaming couscous.
- For something completely different at £3.95 there was the lamb tagine - tender pieces of meat cooked in olive oil and spices with red onion, apricot and almonds.
- The menu includes a range of tagines - Morocco's most popular dish - as well as richly flavoured seafood and vegetarian options.
- I've also been baking tagines using spring lamb and plump, sweet prunes from Agen.
- Meat stews of the Middle East such as Moroccan tagine and Iranian khoresht are often spiced with cinnamon; indeed, in Lebanon and most of Syria the only spices used on meat are cinnamon and allspice.
- Full of local celebs, politicos, business types and tourists there's live African music thrown in that included a tap dancer on our night, and the delicious food includes everything from Moroccan tajines to saucy Afrikaner ox tail stews.
- The meat, which is much less tender, is ideal for the long slow cooking of a tagine.
- A tagine of chicken with olives, preserved lemons and potato was impressive, and the grills here are first rate: kofta lamb, chunks of lamb and so on.
- A green papaya salad from Thailand and a lamb-and-prune tagine from Morocco are among Wayne's specialties.
- This spice mix has its origins in Tunisia and is used in couscous, meat dishes and some tagines.
- There was enough beef left for a curry or a tagine, but I didn't have the time for developed flavours.
- Place all the ingredients in a heavy casserole with a lid, put in a hot oven, when the tagine starts bubbling turn down to low and leave for 6 hours or until the meat is falling apart.
- We liked lamb tagine with apricots and the beef tagine with prunes.
- Another good bet is the savoury Tunisian lamb tagine, simmered with potato, eggs, cheese and herbs, then baked as a pie.
- The food, though inexpensive, is delicious: aromatic tagines, spicy merguez, sweet pastilla.
- Besides the scrumptious couscous, you may want to try one of any number of tagines, ranging from $20 - $30.
- The main courses were a lamb and apricot tajine served with couscous, and carbonades made with Coreff (a beer from Brittany) and served with mashed potatoes.
- More ambitious cooking and a decent wine list transforms the cafe into a delectable spot for Cornish sardines, tiger prawns with tomatoes, garlic and basil, tagines and paellas in the evenings.
- 1.1 The dish used for cooking tagines.
Example sentencesExamples - For a truly beautiful vegetable stew, bake it in an earthenware tagine that allows each vegetable to retain its shape and colour, the whole dish coming together in a beautiful mosaic.
- There were always lots of us at mealtimes, and a tajine or two was always simmering on the fire.
- Things are happy enough before the young, amused-by-the-foreign-stranger waitress emerges with a tagine, steaming lightly from beneath its pyramidal clay lid.
- The ingredients, spices, and aromatics are placed in the tagine with a mere spoonful of water.
- I brought back a giant tagine from Morocco and I'd fill it with chicken and vegetables with a bit of olive oil and lemon.
- Spoon the squab mixture into a tajine and cover.
- Using a slotted spoon, transfer the lamb to a tagine and add enough hot liquid to almost cover.
- For instance, northern African nomads, in the past and still today, would often use a clay tagine, a cooking pot with a conical lid enclosure acting like an oven, used for making meat stews.
- Her vegetable studded couscous arrives in a straw tagine called a tbak, which sits like a tableside footstool.
- Main courses are fun, with many arriving in hand-painted Moroccan pots called tajines - deep dishes with conical lids.
- The result is not the same as the long slow cooking over a constantly replenished wood fire of the traditional tagine, the clay pot with the conical lid, which produces, at the end, a rich reduced sauce.
OriginFrom Moroccan Arabic ṭažin from Arabic ṭājin 'frying pan'. Definition of tagine in US English: taginenoun A North African stew of spiced meat and vegetables prepared by slow cooking in a shallow earthenware cooking dish with a tall, conical lid. 塔金(北非一道用调好味的肉加蔬菜炖煮的菜肴,用带有高锥形盖子的浅砂锅以文火炖煮) Example sentencesExamples - This spice mix has its origins in Tunisia and is used in couscous, meat dishes and some tagines.
- I've also been baking tagines using spring lamb and plump, sweet prunes from Agen.
- More ambitious cooking and a decent wine list transforms the cafe into a delectable spot for Cornish sardines, tiger prawns with tomatoes, garlic and basil, tagines and paellas in the evenings.
- Full of local celebs, politicos, business types and tourists there's live African music thrown in that included a tap dancer on our night, and the delicious food includes everything from Moroccan tajines to saucy Afrikaner ox tail stews.
- For something completely different at £3.95 there was the lamb tagine - tender pieces of meat cooked in olive oil and spices with red onion, apricot and almonds.
- Meat stews of the Middle East such as Moroccan tagine and Iranian khoresht are often spiced with cinnamon; indeed, in Lebanon and most of Syria the only spices used on meat are cinnamon and allspice.
- Besides the scrumptious couscous, you may want to try one of any number of tagines, ranging from $20 - $30.
- There was enough beef left for a curry or a tagine, but I didn't have the time for developed flavours.
- The meat, which is much less tender, is ideal for the long slow cooking of a tagine.
- The menu includes a range of tagines - Morocco's most popular dish - as well as richly flavoured seafood and vegetarian options.
- The food, though inexpensive, is delicious: aromatic tagines, spicy merguez, sweet pastilla.
- But, like most stews, tagines generally need to simmer too long to be put together after work.
- We liked lamb tagine with apricots and the beef tagine with prunes.
- Place all the ingredients in a heavy casserole with a lid, put in a hot oven, when the tagine starts bubbling turn down to low and leave for 6 hours or until the meat is falling apart.
- A tagine of chicken with olives, preserved lemons and potato was impressive, and the grills here are first rate: kofta lamb, chunks of lamb and so on.
- A green papaya salad from Thailand and a lamb-and-prune tagine from Morocco are among Wayne's specialties.
- You then share a Brasilian plate of two empenadas (baked turnovers, one beef and one sardine), red beans, salad and salsa, and the plat du jour, a lamb tajine, deliciously spiced.
- The main courses were a lamb and apricot tajine served with couscous, and carbonades made with Coreff (a beer from Brittany) and served with mashed potatoes.
- Once the table is cleared, large tagines of lamb or beef, or chicken, or all three arrive with the omnipresent peak of steaming couscous.
- Another good bet is the savoury Tunisian lamb tagine, simmered with potato, eggs, cheese and herbs, then baked as a pie.
OriginFrom Moroccan Arabic ṭažin from Arabic ṭājin ‘frying pan’. |