kishkeh

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English

Etymology 1

(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)

Noun

kishkeh (uncountable)

  1. a fermented mixture of grain and yogurt, dried and ground to a flour
    • 1951, Derrick Brian Jelliffe, Infant Nutrition in the Subtropics and Tropics, page 30:
      Kishkeh, as prepared by an UNRWAPRNE formula, is made by adding 3.5 litres of leban to 2.5 kg of burghul. After drying, the final product is reported to keep for at least a year.
    • 1965, Jamal Karam Harfouche, Social Structure of Low-income Families in Lebanon, page 30:
      [] served fruits and vegetables, cheese, lebneh, kareesheh, kaourma, kishkeh, thyme and other herbs).
    • 1999, Sharon Yntema, Christine Beard, New Vegetarian Baby, page 50:
      Another food, kishkeh, is made “by adding 3.5 litres of leban (soured milk) to 2.5 kilograms of burghul.
  2. a dip based on yogurt and bulghur
    • 1995, House & Garden - Volume 50, Issues 7-12, page 122:
      Kishkeh is a cool summer salad of bulgur (cracked wheat), mint and yogurt, and babaganouj has that lovely, smoky Eastern taste because the aubergines are charred under a hot grill before they are peeled.
    • 2016 July 9, Marie-Helene Carleton, “Syrian refugee chefs share their recipes”, in Aljazeera:
      Kishkeh, a Syrian appetiser by Moayyad Hamoud

Etymology 2

Noun

kishkeh (uncountable)

  1. Alternative form of kishke
    • 1952, Harry Goldberg, The Hoods, page 31:
      There were small pieces of gefuellte fish and kishkeh on separate plates, intended evidently for Saturday's and Sunday's dinner. I sliced off a thin piece of the kishkeh with my knife.
    • 2012, John S. Elmo, Room for Enjoyment: Memoir of a Design Merchant, page 27:
      I mean, Seymour will push Valium down his throat every minute you're at our table eating our motzahs or kishkeh.
    • 2017, Judith Katz, Running Fiercely Toward a High Thin Sound:
      They came very highly recommended and offered everything: old-time Jewish food like kishkeh and k'nishes, as well as the more modern stuff-little hot dogs, chicken wings, things of that nature.