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Persian & Bukharian Jewish Foods

Among the oldest and most flavorful kitchens in Klal Yisrael are those of the Persian (Iranian) and Bukharian (Central Asian) Jewish communities — traditions carried across centuries from Iran, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, and beyond. Their tables are built on fragrant rice, slow-simmered herbs, dried fruit, and warm spice, and on Shabbat and Yom Tov these flavors fill the home. This guide walks through some of the best-known dishes, what they actually are, and what cooks look for when they shop.

The heart of the Persian Jewish kitchen

Persian Jewish cooking is famous for balance — sweet against sour, tender meat against bright herbs, and rice that is treated as an art form rather than a side dish. A few dishes appear again and again on Shabbat and holiday tables, though every family and region has its own version.

  • Gondi — perhaps the most iconic Persian Jewish dish. These are dumplings made from ground chicken (or sometimes ground meat) blended with chickpea flour and seasoned with spices such as cardamom and turmeric, then simmered in a clear chicken broth. Gondi is closely associated with Shabbat among Persian Jews and is often served as a first course.
  • Sabzi and herb stews — the word sabzi refers to fresh herbs, and herb-forward stews are a cornerstone of the cuisine. Ghormeh sabzi is a deeply green stew of finely chopped herbs (commonly parsley, cilantro, and fenugreek), beans, and meat, brightened with dried limes (limoo amani) for its signature tang. Gheimeh, made with yellow split peas and dried lime, is another beloved stew. Communities vary on which herbs and beans go in, and on whether kitniyot-type ingredients are used — practices around kitniyot differ by community and especially on Pesach, so confirm with your Hacham or rav.
  • Rice and tahdig — rice (polo or chelo) is prepared with great care, often parboiled and then steamed so each grain stays separate and fluffy. The prize at the bottom of the pot is tahdig, the golden, crackling crust of rice (sometimes layered with potato or thin bread). Beyond plain rice, mixed rice dishes such as herbed rice for festive meals, or rice studded with dried fruit, nuts, and barberries (zereshk), are common at simchas.

The Bukharian table

Bukharian Jews trace their roots to Central Asia, and their food reflects the crossroads of Silk Road cooking — hearty, generous, and built around rice and meat. The flavors lean toward cumin, coriander, and abundant carrots and onions.

  • Plov (osh) — the signature Bukharian dish, a rich rice pilaf cooked together with meat, lavishly grated carrots, onions, and warm spices like cumin. The general word for it is osh, and there are many regional and family variations, including herbed and dried-fruit versions. Plov is a centerpiece of celebrations and a frequent Shabbat dish, and some cooks prepare a green, herbed version for Shabbat.
  • Hearty soups and savory pastries — Bukharian kitchens are known for filling soups and for baked or fried dough filled with meat, onion, or pumpkin. The exact names and shapes vary widely from family to family, so cooks tend to learn them at a parent’s or grandparent’s side rather than from a single fixed recipe.
  • Bread and accompaniments — round, often sesame-topped breads, pickled vegetables, and fresh herb platters round out the meal. Tea, frequently served in the Central Asian style, is a constant companion to the table.

What carries Shabbat through the night

Like Jewish communities everywhere, Persian and Bukharian families prepare a long-cooked Shabbat dish that simmers from before candle-lighting through the day. Among Bukharian Jews this is often oshi sabo — a rice-and-meat dish left to cook slowly overnight, the Central Asian counterpart to the Ashkenazi cholent or the wider Sephardic-Mizrahi hamin. Some families also prepare a related green, herbed overnight rice dish sometimes called bakhsh. Persian families likewise have slow-cooked Shabbat-day dishes layered with rice, meat, beans, and sometimes eggs nestled to cook in the pot. The specifics — ingredients, how it’s kept warm, and the relevant halachot of cooking and warming on Shabbat — vary by community and posek, so confirm with your Hacham or rav.

Flavors and the pantry

What unites both kitchens is a distinctive pantry. Cooks reach for dried limes for sourness, turmeric and cumin for warmth, cardamom for fragrance, dried fruits and nuts for festive rice, fresh herbs by the bunch, fenugreek, saffron for color and aroma, and barberries for their jewel-like tartness. Quality basmati or other long-grain rice is essential, and many cooks are particular about the brand and the soak. Sweet-and-sour balance, generous use of fresh herbs, and patience with rice are the through-lines of both traditions.

Cooking it at home

For families building these dishes in their own kitchens, a few categories of shopping come up repeatedly: reliable rice and the right pot for a good tahdig; dried limes, saffron, barberries, fenugreek, and the warm spices that define the cuisine; and the cookware and serving pieces — rice platters, tea sets, large pots for plov — that make a festive table feel complete. These are exactly the kinds of foods, spices, kitchen goods, and Judaica that families across our communities look for, and you can browse what sellers offer on the community explorer to find listings by community. Cookbooks and seforim that preserve these recipes and the customs around them are part of the picture too.

Persian and Bukharian Jewish food is a living inheritance — every gondi rolled, every pot of plov layered, and every crackling tahdig carries generations with it. For more on the foods, customs, and life of communities across Klal Yisrael, visit our guides hub. And because minhag and halacha — from kitniyot to the laws of cooking for Shabbat — differ from one community and one posek to the next, the final word always belongs to your own Hacham or rav.

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