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Revision as of 19:04, 15 June 2010 edit119.152.247.127 (talk)No edit summary← Previous edit Revision as of 19:59, 14 July 2010 edit undoR'n'B (talk | contribs)Administrators420,983 editsm Fix links to disambiguation page TurkishNext edit →
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*] — a yogurt based beverage *] — a yogurt based beverage
*] — a ] dish of seasoned, diluted yogurt *] — a ] dish of seasoned, diluted yogurt
*] — a fermented milk drink *] — a fermented milk drink
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Revision as of 19:59, 14 July 2010

Bottle of carbonated tan sold in Yerevan, Armenia
Doogh with Garlic in Shiraz's cafe

Doogh (Template:Lang-fa, dūgh, also dugh; Template:Lang-ku, also abdúgh; Template:Lang-az; also called shlombeh or shumleh by Pashtuns; sheneena by Iraqi Arabs; mastaw by Kurds; do, abdugh, or tahn by Armenians) is a yogurt-based beverage popular in Afghanistan, Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Iran. The word Doogh is a noun form from the Persian verb دوشیدن (Dushidan) which means "to milk", thus doogh means "what comes from milking". The Kurdish abdugh translates as "ab"-water and "dugh"-yogurt.

Doogh is prepared by beating unflavored yogurt until smooth, then diluting with water to a consistency similar to whole milk. Salt (and sometimes pepper) is added, and commonly dried mint is mixed in as well. Doogh is generally served chilled, or over ice. A variation includes diced cucumbers to provide "crunch".

Carbonation

Traditionally, doogh is left unrefrigerated for 2–3 days in order to allow the yogurt cultures to ripen and fermentation to occur- imparting a natural carbonation. The carbonation in commercially-produced doogh typically comes from the use of carbonated water. As a result, commercially-produced doogh generally has harsher carbonation and coarser bubbles. Some doogh lacks carbonation entirely.

See also

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References

External links

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