My Palestinian relatives make this, usually with ground lamb - and it's heaven on earth!! I've never seen it eaten with yogurt but obviously different traditions in different families/places. Thank you for the complete instructions!!
Hey thanks! My girlfriend bought these and we were eating them RAW without realizing that they have uncooked beef so I’m gonna go ahead and cook them now
I had a Greek salad for dinner yesterday that came with Dolmas rolls. My family loves cooking and after I enjoyed the rolls, I shared this recipe with them. My Grandmother is (98) and is excited watching this video👵🏾
Never made my own, I buy them already wrapped and frozen. I cut up lemons and suspend the grapeleaves in the pot, add a bit of water in the pot and steam to cook. I'm inspired by your video, I think I'm going to make my own from scratch. Thank you.
We love this delicious dish being from Jordan. My wife makes it once in a while and the family loves it. I could it it everyday. Arabic food is the best.
The secret is to make sure you use short grain rice - like Egyptian rice; the effect will not be the same with regular long-grain or medium-grain rice. Also, before layering the stuffed grape leaves, put a layer of chicken thighs below. In preparing the liquid it is to cook in, add a little bouillon cube (broken up) and a little butter ghee. Do not add lemon until the very end of cooking, if you want this flavor. If you want to stuff it with ground lamb instead of ground beef, exclude the butter ghee as the lamb mixture will be naturally oily. The spices my Auntie taught me to use in the raw meat mixture (never pre-cooked) was pepper, cinnamon, allspice, nutmeg, and ground cloves. She just called them “hawajay,” which means “spices” in Arabic. It takes about 45 minutes to prepare a full jar = five minutes for everyone to devour at the dinner table (lol).
I made your recipe today and it was soooo good! For the spices I had an omani spice blend, to which I added a little cinnamon. I also had some fresh mint and parsley, which I added 2 tbsp of. It was so good. Thank you!
This recipe is great and very similar to my familar recipe particularly the cinnamon most people think it's crazy to put cinnamon with ground beef but trust me it adds just enough of that 'it' flavor you will be craving after. My only addition would also be paprika and cumin but that could also be added into the yogurt dip later
Not only does this look like an amazing recipe, but the cook is a delight I could watch her cook all day, keep up the great recipes, you have a new follower
I'm in the kitchen right now making a hugeeee batch of tabule as we speak...my moms making kibbeh...my aunt is making hummus.. a cousin is making grape leaves and we're all getting together tomorrow for a massive Lebanese feast and I'm so excited!!! My grandfather was full blooded Lebanese and we have all learned to cook traditional dishes but don't get together often for a feast like this! We just discovered that my grandmothers back yard neighbor has a grape vine that's spilling into her yard and we feel like we've hit the jackpot!!! Lol I'm sure you understand...usually we have to go to a few "secret spots" in our tiny town in Massachusetts to forage the leaves but now we have an abundance of grape leaves!!! Your recipe is pretty much how we do it we do a few things differently but I've watched a ton of videos and everyone does something different that's just how it is. I absolutely love your channel!!!
Here in the eastern of KSA, we cook it differently. We don't use meat and we use a lot of spices and lemon.Also, the Hashwa includes rice, parsley, tomatoes, and chipped onion. when we roll the grape leaves, we cover it with a sauce made of 6 cups of water, 3-4 cups of lemon, 1-2 cups of olive oil, 5 spoons pomgrana hone, 1table spoon of salt, 2ts pepper, 2 table spoons of the 7 spices. Then, we cook it about 2-3 hours. all the process to make grape leaves takes the whole day😂 but it worth all that effort actually.👌🏻👌🏻
Absolutely delicious! I have enjoyed eating this In Kuwait. Palastinians do not use cinnamon in this dish. Lots of Lemon and tenderness in the cooking time makes it a bomb 😂 to dine it. Love from Srilanka
I was recently in orlando on holiday and tried a Lebanese place there, fell in love with these! Came back to London and searched TH-cam for a recipe, will definitely try yours! X
Yes, and you don't just cut the stem off cut the entire vein out. Picking the leaves is half the fun.. making a pot of these should be an all day affair. And , don't use hamburger go get some lamb! And the only seasoning you need is the sour cream you eat them with..
We call them sarmale in Moldova and România. In addition to rice and ground meat, we add chopped tomatoes, onion, shredded carrots and parsley. We serve them with sour cream. Another version is to wrap the filling in cabbage blanched leaves. Delicious!!
Bravo bravo, you are one of the few who brown the meat like me, it give is more flavor than raw meat; I also add chicken broth where you put hot water, thank you
Nice, definitely going to make these. Been eating grape leaves lately in salads and sauteed in meals. BTW I hand pick my leaves myself at a local park I go to often. Great addition to my culinary
I’ve made these many time, a wonder lady Hifa Karmeed taught me how. Almost exactly as you do except she taught me to cook the rice first, it cuts the cooking time and keeps a bit of a bite to the leaves
How interesting! I usually don't cook the rice because it will cook in the pot after rolled in the grape vine leaves, but I may have to try that if I'm tight on time!
Don't worry if they don't come out pretty. They mostly hold together even if some unravel or break. And they'll all taste the same! I can't wait to try this with the cinnamon. I may try mint and dill as well.
I've always wanted to learn to make these. I love stuffed grape leaves, even the canned ones. There's a Lebanese grocery store near me that makes them but they're simmered in a tomato-y sauce. I love coming across different versions of these. Side note: I loved your session with TH-cam earlier this week, and look forward to checking out more of your recipes and content!
How have I not discovered your channel before the other day (Lebanese rice with ground beef recipe)?!? You have such a lovely demeanour and I love how you provide such simple yet thorough recipes. We’re Italian but growing up I had a Lebanese friend whose family never hesitated to have me eat with them (and vice versa of course! Hey Italians, Lebanese we’re the same in that respect 😊) so I grew up loving Middle Eastern food and now my children enjoy other ethnicities’ foods too. If I were to cook these in an Instant Pot, would I need to layer the potatoes and for how long would they need to pressure cook for? My house heats up way too much, especially in the summer, if I were to cook anything for that long on the stovetop (or oven) so I would prefer pressure cooker recipes. Can you provide Instant Pot alternatives for your recipes? 🙏
Hello! This is what she had on her blog for pressure cooker instructions: Use a pressure cooker instead. In that case, no plate is needed to hold down the grape leaves. Just pack the stuffed grape leaves in the pressure cooker, add the water, close and cook for 15 to 20 minutes at the first pressure mark.
Welcome to the channel! That is so wonderful that you and your family were able to be exposed to and share foods from different cultures. If you have a pressure cooker, the grape leaves can be made with that! Just pack the rolled grape leaves in the pressure cooker, add the water, close and cook for 15 to 20 minutes at the first pressure mark. In this case, I would still layer the potatoes to ensure that the leaves don’t touch the bottom of the pot. Hope this helps!
i'm from honduras where there is a sizeable middle-eastern community so middle-eastern foods are not uncommon. i am addicted to these but i had never heard of them dipped in yogurt. might be worth a try.
I miss this food. 🥰 They call it Mashi (Don't know if that spells correctly)in UAE. All time favourite esp.on weekends and family gatherings 😋😋😋 Thanks for sharing your version of this. 🥰😘
To open a jar, turn jar upside down with lid facing counter and slam jar on counter ( no, it won’t break ) , some times it takes a couple of slams but it works.
I don’t cook the beef I keep it raw because I use pressure cooker and also stuff cusa to cook with the Diwali. And I use lamb meat as my meat or chicken. My Arab sister in law taught me to make this. My favorite dish
The closest ones to the ones we make in Cyprus. But we put onion and parsley to the mix and it's pork. We also don't put the 7 spices but the whole technique is the same
I really hate them .. well hate is too strong word :) im not a big fan actually i am not a fan at all :D but i love to make the stuffed grape leaves because it's my husband's (syrian) favourite food! we both have so much fun while rolling them up, I love how cooking brings people together :)
My Palestinian relatives make this, usually with ground lamb - and it's heaven on earth!! I've never seen it eaten with yogurt but obviously different traditions in different families/places. Thank you for the complete instructions!!
Hey thanks! My girlfriend bought these and we were eating them RAW without realizing that they have uncooked beef so I’m gonna go ahead and cook them now
WHAT THE FUCK 😂😂😂😂
@@williamallison417 lmao fr though
😂😂😂sorry
If they were sold as ready to eat they probably weren't raw.
@@yasminamer9157 I know what uncooked meat is.
I had a Greek salad for dinner yesterday that came with Dolmas rolls. My family loves cooking and after I enjoyed the rolls, I shared this recipe with them. My Grandmother is (98) and is excited watching this video👵🏾
Aww, that's so sweet! Hope you all get a chance to make and try them!
Never made my own, I buy them already wrapped and frozen. I cut up lemons and suspend the grapeleaves in the pot, add a bit of water in the pot and steam to cook.
I'm inspired by your video, I think I'm going to make my own from scratch. Thank you.
We love this delicious dish being from Jordan. My wife makes it once in a while and the family loves it. I could it it everyday. Arabic food is the best.
Thank you for loving our food.
Its Turkish food. Why do you think all former Ottoman states have this food. Because Türk invented it.
The secret is to make sure you use short grain rice - like Egyptian rice; the effect will not be the same with regular long-grain or medium-grain rice. Also, before layering the stuffed grape leaves, put a layer of chicken thighs below. In preparing the liquid it is to cook in, add a little bouillon cube (broken up) and a little butter ghee. Do not add lemon until the very end of cooking, if you want this flavor. If you want to stuff it with ground lamb instead of ground beef, exclude the butter ghee as the lamb mixture will be naturally oily. The spices my Auntie taught me to use in the raw meat mixture (never pre-cooked) was pepper, cinnamon, allspice, nutmeg, and ground cloves. She just called them “hawajay,” which means “spices” in Arabic. It takes about 45 minutes to prepare a full jar = five minutes for everyone to devour at the dinner table (lol).
Yes,this is how I was thought to cook them! Outstanding
I love this. I grew up eating these all the time with my family
So nostalgic! One of my favorites!
My ex was Lebanese, and his mom always made these for me. I don’t miss him, but I miss Lebanese food lmao.
I made your recipe today and it was soooo good! For the spices I had an omani spice blend, to which I added a little cinnamon. I also had some fresh mint and parsley, which I added 2 tbsp of. It was so good. Thank you!
So glad to hear it!! Thank you!
Ramadan moubarak ☝🏽🤲🏽 maa sha ALLAH delicious 🎀🤭🤗❤️
This recipe is great and very similar to my familar recipe particularly the cinnamon most people think it's crazy to put cinnamon with ground beef but trust me it adds just enough of that 'it' flavor you will be craving after. My only addition would also be paprika and cumin but that could also be added into the yogurt dip later
Thanks for sharing this! Exactly the authentic recipe, well done.
Saved me an hour’s phone call with mum 😂
Not only does this look like an amazing recipe, but the cook is a delight I could watch her cook all day, keep up the great recipes, you have a new follower
Awww, that means so much - thank you!
I will try your way because this is what I miss from when I was in Lebanon. Thank you, and God Bless.
Excited to hear what you think! Hope you enjoy!!
I'm in the kitchen right now making a hugeeee batch of tabule as we speak...my moms making kibbeh...my aunt is making hummus.. a cousin is making grape leaves and we're all getting together tomorrow for a massive Lebanese feast and I'm so excited!!! My grandfather was full blooded Lebanese and we have all learned to cook traditional dishes but don't get together often for a feast like this! We just discovered that my grandmothers back yard neighbor has a grape vine that's spilling into her yard and we feel like we've hit the jackpot!!! Lol I'm sure you understand...usually we have to go to a few "secret spots" in our tiny town in Massachusetts to forage the leaves but now we have an abundance of grape leaves!!! Your recipe is pretty much how we do it we do a few things differently but I've watched a ton of videos and everyone does something different that's just how it is. I absolutely love your channel!!!
Here in the eastern of KSA, we cook it differently. We don't use meat and we use a lot of spices and lemon.Also, the Hashwa includes rice, parsley, tomatoes, and chipped onion. when we roll the grape leaves, we cover it with a sauce made of 6 cups of water, 3-4 cups of lemon, 1-2 cups of olive oil, 5 spoons pomgrana hone, 1table spoon of salt, 2ts pepper, 2 table spoons of the 7 spices. Then, we cook it about 2-3 hours. all the process to make grape leaves takes the whole day😂 but it worth all that effort actually.👌🏻👌🏻
Absolutely delicious! I have enjoyed eating this In Kuwait. Palastinians do not use cinnamon in this dish. Lots of Lemon and tenderness in the cooking time makes it a bomb 😂 to dine it. Love from Srilanka
I was recently in orlando on holiday and tried a Lebanese place there, fell in love with these! Came back to London and searched TH-cam for a recipe, will definitely try yours! X
Awesome! Takes me back to when I was a child! The potatoes go great with flat bread and pickled mango!
Oh interested - pickled mango!! Never tried that
@@Feelgoodfoodie it's also called anchar and I love it with my food!
Going to try this tonight! corona boredom.. been cooking so much!
Nynke B. I’m with you! 🤦🏽♀️
Every stuffed grape leaf I had, never had neat in them?
@@Chino-Kafu they make them different depending on how they want I had both
How was it?
@@Drawingb t was great!!
Learning healthy ways of life , this channel is awesome
I’m making them today , picked my own leaves , they grow everywhere here in NY . Gotta blanch them to soften them .
Yes, and you don't just cut the stem off cut the entire vein out. Picking the leaves is half the fun.. making a pot of these should be an all day affair. And , don't use hamburger go get some lamb! And the only seasoning you need is the sour cream you eat them with..
Pray for palestine & Lebanon
🇱🇧🇵🇸🙏🏻🤲🏻
We call them sarmale in Moldova and România. In addition to rice and ground meat, we add chopped tomatoes, onion, shredded carrots and parsley. We serve them with sour cream. Another version is to wrap the filling in cabbage blanched leaves. Delicious!!
Those sound absolutely wonderful!
This is the most delicious thing everrrrrrrrr
Thank you!!!
@@Feelgoodfoodie this recipe is actually Turkish.
Bro I have been eating this my whole life it’s a family recipe it’s so good
Bravo bravo, you are one of the few who brown the meat like me, it give is more flavor than raw meat; I also add chicken broth where you put hot water, thank you
I watched the whole thing and now I wanna make it even more
I love middle east grape leaves 😍
The best!
Nice, definitely going to make these. Been eating grape leaves lately in salads and sauteed in meals. BTW I hand pick my leaves myself at a local park I go to often. Great addition to my culinary
Yummy veggie combination recipe.
You are a good teacher to explain thank you. Mrs. G
Thank you, thank you. My mom didn't do it exactly this way (Palestinian) but your recipe looks very good.
I’ve made these many time, a wonder lady Hifa Karmeed taught me how. Almost exactly as you do except she taught me to cook the rice first, it cuts the cooking time and keeps a bit of a bite to the leaves
How interesting! I usually don't cook the rice because it will cook in the pot after rolled in the grape vine leaves, but I may have to try that if I'm tight on time!
besides the food looks amazing your personality is fire, love you girl !!
Yeah it is call wara anab it is soo good
This was a hit!! I can’t stop making it. So simple and delicious. Thank you 🙏🏻
Aww, that makes me so happy to hear! You're so welcome!
Don't worry if they don't come out pretty. They mostly hold together even if some unravel or break. And they'll all taste the same! I can't wait to try this with the cinnamon. I may try mint and dill as well.
Good point! I like it that way, but definitely do what works for you! Hope you enjoy!
I can eat that every day.❤❤
Thank u for sharing this simple recipe i will try it today
I've always wanted to learn to make these. I love stuffed grape leaves, even the canned ones. There's a Lebanese grocery store near me that makes them but they're simmered in a tomato-y sauce. I love coming across different versions of these.
Side note: I loved your session with TH-cam earlier this week, and look forward to checking out more of your recipes and content!
How have I not discovered your channel before the other day (Lebanese rice with ground beef recipe)?!? You have such a lovely demeanour and I love how you provide such simple yet thorough recipes. We’re Italian but growing up I had a Lebanese friend whose family never hesitated to have me eat with them (and vice versa of course! Hey Italians, Lebanese we’re the same in that respect 😊) so I grew up loving Middle Eastern food and now my children enjoy other ethnicities’ foods too. If I were to cook these in an Instant Pot, would I need to layer the potatoes and for how long would they need to pressure cook for? My house heats up way too much, especially in the summer, if I were to cook anything for that long on the stovetop (or oven) so I would prefer pressure cooker recipes. Can you provide Instant Pot alternatives for your recipes? 🙏
Hello! This is what she had on her blog for pressure cooker instructions:
Use a pressure cooker instead. In that case, no plate is needed to hold down the grape leaves. Just pack the stuffed grape leaves in the pressure cooker, add the water, close and cook for 15 to 20 minutes at the first pressure mark.
Welcome to the channel! That is so wonderful that you and your family were able to be exposed to and share foods from different cultures. If you have a pressure cooker, the grape leaves can be made with that! Just pack the rolled grape leaves in the pressure cooker, add the water, close and cook for 15 to 20 minutes at the first pressure mark. In this case, I would still layer the potatoes to ensure that the leaves don’t touch the bottom of the pot. Hope this helps!
@@Feelgoodfoodie Thanks you for responding back. What do you mean by “first pressure mark”?
@@batoulnasser4019 Thank you!
I like it too and I will definitely going to make it and thank you for showing me how, Merci 👍❤
You're so welcome! Excited to hear how it goes for you!
First video of this recipe that has the cooking on the stove top. Love it. I’d go with more than a teaspoon filling.
Let me know how it goes!
Excited to try it today. Thank you!! 😄
You're so welcome!!!
I've always wanted to try these!
Huge Success! Turned out perfect! Thank you!
That's perfect! Yay!!
My favorite thing in the world. Soooo good.
Agree!
Can’t wait to try it
Thank u very much for the recipe and the tips..
Most welcome 😊
I like it
Yay!
Yummy
😋
Love these
Great video, thanks! Also, one tip would be to have the veiny rough side facing up when rolling and filling the leaves.
Yay! You're welcome! You could do that too!
Congratulations 🎉 very good recipe! 👏 will try to make it 😋😋😋
Thank you so much! Let me know how it goes!
Saw folks who placed a teapot over the grape leaves in the pot to cook. I thought that was strange. Good to see you simply used a plate
Many ways to do it, but this worked best for me!
تحفه تسلم ايدك
This is my favorite
One of mine too!
Love this !
Looks delish
I will try to make it right now ! Loved this video ! Thanks 😊
What a nice channel.. 👏👏👏👏👏👏🌍👏👏👏👏👏
my arb friends would bring and my mouth would be so watery love it
Thank you 😊 🙏
You're so welcome!
Doing this with mullberry leaves right now!
i'm from honduras where there is a sizeable middle-eastern community so middle-eastern foods are not uncommon. i am addicted to these but i had never heard of them dipped in yogurt. might be worth a try.
Oh yeah, definitely give it a try!
I miss this food. 🥰 They call it Mashi (Don't know if that spells correctly)in UAE. All time favourite esp.on weekends and family gatherings 😋😋😋
Thanks for sharing your version of this. 🥰😘
You're so welcome! But now you can make the dish straight from your kitchen!
@@Feelgoodfoodie Yes, i will surely do! 🥰🥰🥰
Have made this last Sunday. They love it and all was gone! They crave for more! 😋😋😋😋🥰🥰🥰🥰
Middle Eastern food is the best food.
Good morning
your recipe easy to do , thank you
fantastic
have a nice day
Tom
Thank you! You too!
❤❤❤❤Looks delicious
wow nice
I like your recipe
Gives me a idea for Cajun style which I think would be amazingly delicious
Thank you so much! Sounds like a good idea!
“More olive oil. I gotta have more olive oil!”-Christopher Walken
To open a jar, turn jar upside down with lid facing counter and slam jar on counter ( no, it won’t break ) , some times it takes a couple of slams but it works.
Or take a can opener or bottle top opener and pop the seal. Sometimes you can use a butter knife too.
Thanks 😊
Good explain
Glad you found it helpful!
"Yay! He likes it. You can say you dont like it."
"I do like it."
Um
LOL!
Great video
I don’t cook the beef I keep it raw because I use pressure cooker and also stuff cusa to cook with the Diwali. And I use lamb meat as my meat or chicken. My Arab sister in law taught me to make this. My favorite dish
There is a Libyan version called burak(براك) you should try it.
Weraq tal-Gheneb 👍🏼👍🏼 Understood that. I am Maltese
Love that!
Can we do with cabbage leaves
I love your ricepy
Thank u
You're so welcome!
The closest ones to the ones we make in Cyprus. But we put onion and parsley to the mix and it's pork. We also don't put the 7 spices but the whole technique is the same
There are definitely quite a few versions to this!
Nice thank you!
Any time!
Thank you for recipe 👍
I just made them using your recipe they were delicious. I just had a hard time getting the leaves out of the jar. Any hints?
It is Palestinian and Syrian bro and as a Palestinian and Syrian this is my best food
I really hate them .. well hate is too strong word :) im not a big fan actually i am not a fan at all :D but i love to make the stuffed grape leaves because it's my husband's (syrian) favourite food!
we both have so much fun while rolling them up, I love how cooking brings people together :)
I love that it is a fun bonding event!
I’m so excited to make these. Do you ever cook them in tomato sauce instead of lemon?
I never have actually, but I think it might work well!
Trying to find recipe on fried kibee (footballs), kousa, cabbage rolls and closed meat pies. Did not see any videos. Thks..jc
I need to get a jar of leaves and some veggies.
It'll be worth it!
omg this is so cool! I never knew how these were made and now i want to try it out asap!
Hello, can you make warak 3inab the day before, leave it in the fridge and and cook it the day after ?
shes lebanese like me !!!!!!
Yes, I am!
-grape leaves in jar
-rice
-ground beef
-all spice
-7spice
-salt
-cinnamon
-lemon juice
-olive oil
Thank you for giving ingredients for a vegetarian option. Have you tried these with brown rice instead of white?
Not yet! But I hear they're pretty good!
What rice you use mam?
The Egyptian version is Yaprach