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Bulgur

Bulgur or borghol is a cracked wheat foodstuff found in Middle Eastern and South Asian cuisines, among others. It is a cereal food made from the groats of several different wheat species.

Characteristics
Bulgur is produced by parboiling raw wheat, which is then de-hulled, dried, and cracked. Bulgur is a common ingredient in cuisines of many countries of the West Asian cuisine and Mediterranean Basin, such as Syria. It has a light, nutty flavor. Bulgur is recognized as a whole grain by the United States Department of Agriculture. Composition and nutrition Cooked bulgur is 78% water, 19% carbohydrates, 3% protein, and contains negligible fat (table). A reference serving supplies of food energy. A study of uncooked samples from different sources found, with some variation between samples, about 9% protein, 11% moisture, 1% ash, 70% starch of which 2–2.8% beneficial resistant starch, 7% fibre, mostly beneficial insoluble fibre. ==Etymology==
Etymology
The word bulgur is the Turkish pronunciation of the Arabic burghul (), which is ultimately borrowed from the Persian barghul. ==History==
History
, 1939 Bulgur originated in the ancient Middle East; food historian Gil Marks dates it to circa 4000 BC. Bulgur was largely unknown in North America until the 20th century when it was brought in by Armenian, Syrian, and Jewish immigrants. ==Culinary uses==
Culinary uses
Bulgur does not require cooking, although it can be included in cooked dishes; soaking in water is all that is needed. Coarse bulgur is used to make pottages, while the medium and fine grains are used as breakfast cereals, and in pilavs, breads, salads such as kısır, and dessert puddings such as kheer. Bulgur porridge is similar to frumenty, a cracked wheat porridge that was a staple of medieval cuisine. In breads, it adds a whole-grain component. It is a main ingredient in kibbeh and in tabbouleh salad. It is often used where rice or couscous could be used. It can be used to accompany other dishes in the same way as pasta or rice. Armenians prepare bulgur as a pilaf in chicken stock, with or without sautéed noodles, or cooked with tomatoes, onions, herbs and red pepper. Finely ground bulgur is used for making eetch, a salad similar to tabbouleh. In Greece, it is known as () and in Cyprus as (), where it is used to make (, known as in Turkish), a variety of kibbeh. It is deep-fried, with a crust made of fine bulgur, flour, oil, salt and egg, filled with ground meat (beef, pork, or both), onions, parsley and spices. The Saudi Arabian version of bulgur, especially common in Nejd and Al-Hasa, is known as (). ==Production and consumption==
Production and consumption
A 2007 study published in the Journal of Food Engineering found that the consumption of bulgur in south-eastern Turkey was 2 and 2.5 times that of pasta and rice, respectively, with the average person consuming 25 kilograms of bulgur annually, and in the Levant, Arabia, Iran, and Iraq, it reached 30-35 kilograms annually. ==See also==
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