) and
çäkçäk as part of a horsemeat platter (on the right) The dishes in Tatar cuisine can be subdivided into the following categories: • hot soups, • main courses, • baked items with a savory filling (also eaten as main course), • dough-based dishes (
pasta), • sweet baked items and other sweets, usually served with tea.
Soups Depending on the
broth (
şulpa) used as the soup base, soups are divided into meat, chicken, fish, vegetable, mushroom, etc. The soup may be thickened with noodles, grains, or vegetables – separately or in combination. Particularly popular is noodle soup served with
toqmaç (homemade noodles) and enriched with pieces of boiled meat or chicken from the broth. Soups are often served with meat balls or stuffed
buns (
öçpoçmaq, pärämäç, bawırsaq). A festive and to a certain extent ceremonial dish for the Tatar is
pilmän (
pelmeni in
Russian), a kind of
dumpling filled with meat and always served in a clear soup.
Main courses Main dishes are usually based on meat,
grains, and potatoes. Meat or chicken boiled in the broth is cut into small pieces and served as a main course, sometimes quickly fried in oil with onions, carrots, and bell peppers. Boiled potatoes are a favorite side dish, with
grated horseradish served as an accompaniment. A chicken stuffed with eggs in milk (
tutırğan tawıq) is a special dish for holidays.
Bäliş is the oldest traditional dish combining meat and grains. Pieces of fat meat (mutton, beef, goose, or goose and duck innards) are combined with grains (
millet,
spelt,
rice) and baked in a
crock.
Tutırma, an intestine filled with finely cut or chopped liver and millet or rice, is another combination of meat and grains.
Pilaw (
pilaf) is served at dinner parties, especially in the city. A popular local version is the so-called
Kazan pilaw prepared with boiled meat. Dishes combining boiled meat with noodles include
qullama or
bişbarmaq, common for many Turkic peoples. Meat is stored in the winter naturally frozen; it is preserved for the spring and the summer by salting or curing. Horse meat is used to make sausages (
qazılıq); cured goose and duck are considered a delicacy. Poultry
eggs, primarily those of chickens, are a very popular dish in Tatar cuisine. They are eaten boiled, fried, and baked. Grains are made into a variety of
porridges: millet, buckwheat, oatmeal, rice, peas, etc.
Baked foods A wide variety of dough dishes is a feature of the traditional Tatar cuisine. Unleavened dough is traditionally used for buns, both sweet and savory,
flatbreads, and
biscuits. Leavened yeast dough is used to make bread (
ikmäk,
ipi), which is always served with meals. Bread was traditionally baked from rye flour, and only the wealthy could afford wheat bread. Today, both wheat and rye bread are found in stores.
Qabartma is a kind of yeast dough pancake that may be prepared in different ways: baked in a pan in front of an open oven fire, or fried in boiling oil in a cauldron.
Qabartma is eaten hot, thickly spread with butter. Liquid batter is also prepared with and without yeast.
Pancakes (
qoymaq) are made from unleavened batter using wheat flour.
Bliny-style pancakes are made from yeast batter using different types of flour (oats, peas, buckwheat, millet, wheat, or mixed). Yeast-batter
qoymaq is thicker than the Russian bliny. It is usually served for breakfast, accompanied by melted butter in a small dish. Various baked items with a savory filling are specific for the Tatar cuisine. The oldest and simplest is
qıstıbí, also called
küzikmäk. This is an unleavened pancake folded into two and filled with cooked
millet. Since the end of the 19th century,
qıstıbí has been made with mashed potatoes.
Bäleş made from unleavened or fermented dough is filled with pieces of fatty meat (mutton, beef, goose, duck, etc.) mixed with grains or potatoes.
Bäleş used to be made for special occasions in the shape of a low truncated cone with an opening on top. Subsequently, the name began to be used for ordinary pies with different fillings, similar to the Russian
pirog. Another traditional Tatar pie is
öçpoçmaq, a triangular shell originally filled with a mixture of fatty meat and onions. Later pieces of potato began to be added to the filling.
Pärämäç (peremech) is a round-shaped minced meat pie, fried and served hot sprinkled with melted butter. Except for the round shape, it is similar to the
çibörek (
cheburek) of the
Crimean Tatars.
Bäkkän (or
täkä), particularly widespread in rural areas, is an individual oval or crescent-shaped pie (like large
pirozhki), filled with various vegetables (mainly pumpkin, also carrots or cabbage).
Sumsa is a similar pie, usually with a meat and rice filling. A special festive dish among urban Kazan Tatars is
göbädiä, a tall round pie with a multilayer filling, which includes rice,
dried fruits, and
qort (a kind of dried salty cheese).
Sweets The Tatar cuisine offers a variety of baked sweets, usually served with tea:
çelpek (deep-fried pancakes),
qatlama (a baked roll with a variety of fillings – poppy seeds, sesame seeds,
qort, nuts),
qoş tele ("bird's tongue", deep-fried squares or diamonds of unleavened dough),
lawaş (fried dumplings filled with raisins),
paştet (sweet pies filled with
jam or
dried fruits) etc.
Çäkçäk (
chakchak, chak-chak, or chek-chek) is a mound of honey-drenched sweet pastry balls, common among all Turkic peoples. It used to be a ceremonial food brought by the bride to the reception at the bridegroom's home. Today it is a common sweet. Honey is very popular in baking and on its own, served with tea.
Beverages Äyrän (
ayran) is a dairy drink made by diluting
qatıq (
katyk, sour milk) with cold water.
Quas (
kvass) is a beverage made from rye flour and malt that the Tatars have borrowed from the
Russians. A
kompot of
dried apricots is a popular dessert at dinner parties. Another non-alcoholic sweet beverage is
sherbet ('''') made from honey. In the 19th and early 20th century it was a purely ceremonial drink, served to wedding guests as the "bride's sherbet" in the bridegroom's home. Tea is a typical hospitality beverage among the Tatars. They drink hot, strong tea, usually with milk. Tea with baked sweets (
qabartma, pancakes) sometimes replaces cooked breakfast. ==Cooking methods and utensils==