Arab salad


Arab salad or Arabic salad is any of a variety of salad dishes that form part of Arab cuisine. Combining many different fruits and spices, and often served as part of a mezze, Arab salads include those from Libya and Tunisia such as the "Tunisian salad" and "black olive and orange salad" and from Tunisia salata machwiya is a grilled salad made from peppers, tomatoes, garlic and onions with olives and tuna on top, those from Syria and Lebanon such as "artichoke salad" and "beet salad", and those from Palestine and Jordan. Other popular Arab salads eaten throughout the Arab world include fattoush and tabouli.
A recipe for Arab salad in Woman's Day magazine includes diced tomato, cucumber and onion. Often mixed with fresh parsley, mint, basil, or thyme and combined with the juice of freshly squeezed lemon and olive oil, Arabic salad contains no lettuce. All the vegetables, except the onion, are left unpeeled, and the salad should be served immediately. Other variations include serving with fried pita slices or adding sumac to the lemon and oil dressing.

Regional variations

Syria

is a Syrian salad typically made from crumbled shanklish, chopped tomatoes and onions, and other ingredients. It is also called "shanklish salad" and is popular elsewhere in the Levant.

Palestine

Among Palestinians, this Arabic salad is known as Salatat al-Bundura and is popularly served alongside rice dishes. It is also called salata falahiyeh, or "finely chopped salad". A version with tahini dressing is also popular. Dagga is a salad popular in the Gaza Strip, made in a mortar and pestle from dill seeds, chiles, and tomatoes.

Egypt

is an Egyptian salad made with cucumber, tomato, mint, onions, and vineagar.

Similar dishes

Similar salads in the Middle East include the Persian salad shirazi, Israeli salad, Turkish choban salad and Greek salad.