Photos by the writer
Afghan food is popular throughout Pakistan. Be it meat cooked to perfection in Afghani skewered botis and kebabs, aromatic Kabuli pulao or Afghani naan loved for its huge size and special texture and taste. But little is known about Afghani sweet treats and Afghan traditional cuisine is rich in sweetmeats.
Some of the more popular desserts are Brides Fingers (Asabia el Aroos), baklava, khatai cookies, firnee, sheer payrra fudge, gosh-i-feel (elephant ear pastries), kaddu bouranee, halwa-i-aurd-i-sujee and sabse borani.
If you happen to visit Quetta and are roaming the streets off Alamdar Road and nearby areas, you are sure to come across many interesting sweet shops where food items with interesting Persian names are being sold.
There is a lot more to Afghan food than just naans and kebabs
One of the famous Afghan delights is kulcha (Afghani cookies) which is not exactly the kulcha or naan that we see in Karachi and Lahore. This kulcha is really different from the tandoori one in other cities and is usually enjoyed with black or green tea.
“Kulcha has six different varieties which we sell here — the sweet variety, the savoury variety and then there is the mixture of savoury and sweet,” says Shabbir, one of the shop owners who, along with his father, has been in kulcha business for over three decades. “The basic ingredients for most of these are the same, i.e. white flour, sugar, salt, baking powder and oil mixed together. Cinnamon and nuts are added for variation in flavour. All these varieties are sweet. The savoury ones taste like saltish biscuits,” he adds.
“The odd one in all these varieties is called Biringee, derived from the Persian word for rice — Biring,” Shabbir points out. “It is made from pure, powdered rice instead of white flour, and sugar and oil.