MOROCCAN STYLE GROUSE


MOROCCAN STYLE GROUSE
4 3 lb. grouse*
sesame oil, to brush birds
1 small onion,
2 cups cooked rice
1 tsp. cumin
1 tsp. coriander
4 cloves garlic, finely chopped
3 tbsp pine nuts, lightly pan toasted
1/2 cup chopped flat leaf or curly parsley
salt and pepper, to taste
Glaze:
1 tsp. turmeric
1/4 cup warmed honey
1/2 tsp. salt
small handful sesame seeds
1 medium-hot red chili pounded to a paste in mortar and pestle
Brush birds with sesame oil and set aside. Heat a heavy based frypan to medium heat and fry onions to translucent over medium heat. Add garlic, allow scent to release and add (in order) pine nuts, cumin, coriander, rice, parsley and salt and pepper. Toss a few times and set aside to cool.
When mix becomes sticky, stuff into the cavities of the grouse.

In the meantime, combine glaze ingredients and allow to infuse for at least half an hour. Close front of grouse with a stitch or two of butchers twine and deep fry until skin changes colour slightly.

You can shallow fry but the birds must be turned constantly. Mix glaze well and apply generously all over the grouse.

Place in hot oven at 200°C or 390°F for 12-14 minutes until golden brown.

Remove from oven, cover with foil and rest for 15 minutes.

Serve with something green, something yellow and something red on a bed of rice or Pilaf.

Submitted by: chefdave


morocco culture,moroccan food,morocco food,moroccan cuisine,morocco beaches,moroccan meal,beaches in morocco,moroccan culture,hercules cave,hercules cave morocco

MOROCCAN CHICKEN


MOROCCAN CHICKEN
1 frying chicken (cut up)
1/4 cup vegetable oil
2 large onions, julienned
2 tbsp. flour
1/2 cup white vinegar
2 cups tomato sauce
1 cup water
1 1/2 tsp. salt
1/2 tsp. pepper
1/2 tsp. allspice
1/2 tsp. cinnamon
Fry chicken pieces in oil until golden brown (partially cook only). Remove chicken from skillet and place in a baking pan. Add onions to the oil and sauté until onions are barely limp. Remove onions from oil and spread on top of chicken pieces.
Sprinkle flour on the frying oil and blend. Add vinegar, tomato sauce, and water. Pour mixture over chicken. Sprinkle seasonings over top of the mixture.

Cover and bake in 400°F oven for 1 hour or until chicken is tender.

Submitted by: Jerry from Pittsburgh



morocco culture,moroccan food,morocco food,moroccan cuisine,morocco beaches,moroccan meal,beaches in morocco,moroccan culture,hercules cave,hercules cave morocco

MOROCCAN CHICKEN WITH TOMATOES AND POTATOES



MOROCCAN CHICKEN WITH TOMATOES AND POTATOES
1 pkg chicken (3 or 4 boneless breasts or a selection of bone-in breasts and/or thighs)
3-4 baking potatoes, peeled and cubed
1 can diced tomatoes (or 2-3 large fresh tomatoes, diced
3-5 carrots or parsnips, quartered
1 large onion, diced
1-2 cloves garlic, diced
1/2-1 red bell pepper, diced
1 cup peas (if desired)
1/4 cup olive oil
parsley (1/4 cup fresh or 2 tbs. dried)
1 1/2 tsp. paprika
a few pinches of saffron, if you've got it
salt and pepper to taste
In a large pot, heat oil and sauté onion and garlic. Add chicken, tomatoes, red pepper, parsley, paprika, saffron, and 1/2 cup water. Cover and cook about an hour (until chicken is thoroughly cooked and just beginning to shred when handled much), stirring occasionally.
Add water as necessary to keep mixture wet and saucy (maybe 2 cups total by the end of the process). Add potatoes, carrots/parsnips, and peas and cook for another 20-30 minutes, or until potatoes and carrots are completely cooked. Salt and pepper as you like.

Now, if you want to eat in authentic Moroccan style, dish onto a large plate and serve with lots of bread (something crusty like French works well).

Using the bread as the only untensil, everyone eats out of their section of the plate (using the right hand only). Wow, a culture where playing in your food is the norm!

Submitted by: Kathleen Rickman


morocco culture,moroccan food,morocco food,moroccan cuisine,morocco beaches,moroccan meal,beaches in morocco,moroccan culture,hercules cave,hercules cave morocco

Moroccan Women's Clothing


Moroccan Women's Clothing


Traditional clothing for women in Morocco consists of brightly colored, long flowing robes, headscarves, slippers, button down blouses, and, sometimes, even veils. This style of clothing has been cultivated since the ancient times of Moroccan history, and is still a part of the living tradition and culture of the country today. Typically, the women of Morocco continue wearing the traditional clothing of their forbearers without extensive variation or influence from the realms of Western fashion, but modern alterations of the historic Muslim-influenced styles of dress are rapidly creeping into wardrobes. Heterogeneous fashions - mixes between traditional Muslim/ Moroccan and modern women's clothing fashions - can now be observed in the streets of Morocco today, but the principles of hijab, the Muslim idea of modest dress, still prevail. There are various different articles of clothing that make up the Moroccan woman's wardrobe, and this paper is meant to shine some light on these pieces, as well as discuss the ways in which Muslim women's fashion has been changing in Morocco.

Images for Moroccan Women's Clothing



morocco culture,moroccan food,morocco food,moroccan cuisine,morocco beaches,moroccan meal,beaches in morocco,moroccan culture,hercules cave,hercules cave morocco

The Al Houara Resort

Al Houara Resort Property Tanger Asilah Morocco
Al Houara Resort Properties Tanger Asilah MoroccoAl Houara Resort PropertyAl Houara Resort Property Tanger Asilah



Every so often a development comes along that matches the superlatives that frequently colour the language of estate agency, words such as sumptuous, amazing and unbeatable. The Al Houara Resort deserves this and much more.

THE DEVELOPER

Currently under construction by Qatari Diar, the development arm of the Qatar government, the $600 million Al Houara Resort is designed to be the most opulent and stylish resort in Morocco. This internationally renowned developer recently purchased the former barracks of the Household Cavalry in Chelsea and have unparalleled developments in countries throughout the world. In Morocco they are looking to create a flagship resort that will confirm their reputation as the developers of the world's finest real estate projects.
For the property buyer dealing with a company such as Qatari Diar, backed by the government of Qatar, has many advantages. For a start there's no prospect of them going bust! Plus they are determined to create a project that shows the world what Qatar can do and so will spare no expense to ensure this happens. The project is completely pre-financed and no client monies will be used in the construction - it will all be placed in an ESCROW account to safeguard buyers.

THE LOCATION

Situated on the picturesque stretch of coastline that runs from Tangier to Asilah, the Al Houara Resort will attract the most exclusive visitors to this privileged location. The attractive design of this project reflects the best of Moroccan architecture combined with a design that incorporates the comforts of 21st century living.
Property investors should also be aware that we would expect a significant uplift in value when the Tangier airport opens to more direct flights from the UK. A recent study put this capital uplift at around 30% for developments within 10 minutes of an international airport.

WHAT'S AVAILABLE

There is a complete range of property available from entry level one bedroom apartments through to luxurious six bedroom beach front palaces spread across the 234 hectares. (This equals a build density of only 20% - amongst the lowest in Morocco.)

Beach Palaces from €8,800,00

Beach Villas from €2,093,000

Beach Apartments from €268,800

Golf Villas from €878,000 - 20% Discount on certain units!

Golf Apartments from €151,488

OWNERSHIP OPTIONS

The developer is offering two ownership models:

Private - full freehold to use as you wish.

Investment Ownership Option - Personal Use and Rental Exchange - This innovative ownership model is offered in conjunction with Wyndham Worldwide's Registry Collection, the world's largest rental company with a database of 9 million clients. Properties in this scheme are offered fully furnished and managed with an allocation for personal use and if you fancy a change you can exchange weeks in Al Houara for weeks in other Wyndham Resorts throughout the world.

COMPLETION: AUGUST 2011


FINANCE AND PAYMENT TERMS


OPTION 1:

  • 5,000€ to reserve
  • 20% down after 21 days (paid into an Escrow account)
  • 30% at foundation (after one year)
  • 20% at roof
  • 30% after two years on completion

OPTION 2:

  • 5,000€ to reserve
  • 20% down after 21 days (paid into an Escrow account)
  • 10% after one year
  • After this financing available from Moroccan Bank

DEVELOPMENT FEATURES

  • 20 minutes from Tangier
  • 10 minutes from airport
  • 2.5km of beachfront
  • 3 x luxury hotels - Kempinski confirmed
  • Moroccan Spa
  • Beach Club
  • Retail Centre with exclusive boutiques
  • Large Forested Area
  • 18-hole VJ Singh signature golf course
  • Equestrian Centre
  • Al Houara Kasbah
  • Sports and Recreational facilities
  • Conference Centre
  • Entertainment Centre

Al Houara Palace

Al Houara Villa

Al Houara Apartment




Register Here For Your Moroccan Investment Report!


morocco culture,moroccan food,morocco food,moroccan cuisine,morocco beaches,moroccan meal,beaches in morocco,moroccan culture,hercules cave,hercules cave morocco

Morocco Danse



Morocco, officially the Kingdom of Morocco. Arabic name al-Mamlakat al-Maghribiyyah translates to "The Western Kingdom". Al-Maghrib, or Maghreb, meaning "The West", is commonly used. Wikipedia
Capital: Rabat
Currency: Moroccan dirham
King: Mohammed VI of Morocco
Population: 32,272,974 (2011) World Bank
Official language: Arabic Language
Government: Parliamentary system, Unitary state, Constitutional monarchy, Monarchy 
Danse du ventre, or, to use the deliberately coined American misnomer, belly dancing, is not at all what Western society thinks it to be, i.e. a dance of sex and seduction. This is an erroneous and ignorant belief, reinforced and perpetrated by stage and movie writers too lazy to do research. Neither is it a 'belly' dance, since much more is involved than just the stomach muscles.
Oriental dancing, as the Arabs themselves call it, is one of the oldest forms of dance, originating with pre-Biblical religious rites worshiping motherhood and two of its movements (the only two actually done with the abdominal muscles) have as their practical side the preparation of females for the stresses of childbirth. Thus it is also, in a way, the oldest form of natural childbirth instruction.
According to Farab Firdoz, a dancer from Bahrein, Saudi Arabia, this use of the dance was still performed in the less Westernized parts of her country in the '50s, around the bedside of a woman in childbirth, by a circle of her fellow tribeswomen. In this ritualistic form men are not allowed to watch it. The purpose here is to hypnotize the woman in labor into an imitation of the movements with her own body. This greatly facilitates the birth and reduces pain from womb contractions. It helps the mother to move with instead of against the contractions.
Unfortunately, Western civilization brought a sick eroticism to the Middle East along with its technical advances. In The Dancer of Shamahka, Armen Ohanian says:
"Thus in Cairo one evening I saw, with sick incredulous eyes, one of our most sacred dances degraded into a bestiality horrible and revolting. It is our poem of the mystery and pain of motherhood, which all true Asiatic men watch with reverence and humility, in the faraway corners of Asia, where the destructive breath of the Occident has not yet penetrated. In this olden Asia, which has kept the dance in its primitive purity, it represents maternity, the mysterious conception of life, the suffering and the joy with which a new soul is brought into the world.
"Could any man born of woman contemplate this most holy subject, expressed in an art so pure and so ritualistic as our Eastern dance with less than profound reverence? Such is our Asiatic veneration of motherhood, that there are countries and tribes whose most binding oath is sworn upon the stomach, because it is from this sacred cup that humanity has issued.
"But the spirit of the Occident had touched this holy dance and it became the horrible danse du ventre, the ‘hoochie-koochie’. To me, a nauseating revelation of unsuspected depths of human bestiality, to others it was -- amusing. I heard the lean Europeans chuckling. I saw lascivious smiles upon even the lips of Asiatics, and I fled."
Generations of Bedouin and Berber mothers may have to bear their young not only without benefit of hospitals and modern antiseptic methods, but also without the comfort and muscular aid of what is definitely an ancient folk ritual. This is because even some Arabic people are now beginning to see sex in what is simply a gymnastic exercise for a natural function. As a result, the ritual is slowly dying out.
Other peoples, among them the Hawaiians and Maoris of New Zealand, have had their own chidlbirth preparation dances involving pelvic and abdominal muscles. The Hawaiians used to have a hula called "Ohelo", that was done in a reclining position, by both sexes, every morning. As late as 1936, the Maoris still practiced their form if this exercise.
A small subsect of the Allaoui Moslems believe that the Messiah will be born to a man, since woman is unworthy of such a high honor. Under this supposition, the men in that sect practice Oriental dancing in preparation for the honor to be awarded them someday, that of giving birth to their Deliverer.
The idea that children must be brought forth in pain is a religious one, based on the Christian concept of original sin and the penance to be exacted for it. The Bible states, "In sorrow thou shalt bring forth children". Nothing is said about undue or excruciating pain, and yet the thought of agonizing birth pangs is pounded into our heads from the earliest age of understanding. Thus, childbirth is approached with bodies & muscles tensed in fear and anticipation. Instead of relaxing and helping nature along, we put stumbling blocks in her way.
The newest idea in obstetrics today is to prepare pregnant women for the coming ordeal either through hypnotism or special training classes. They can now be ultra-modern and still give birth the "natural childbirth" way. Doctors have recently found that babies born in this manner come into the world more alert and without the common anaesthesia-induced torpor.
What hypnotism accomplishes, although temporarily, is the gradual removal through post-hypnotic suggestion of the whole mental concept of painful childbirth. The relaxed woman can now concentrate only on helping nature by moving with the contractions of labor.
This self-same thing is accomplished by the circle of dancing Arab tribes women who hypnotize the woman in labor into imitating their rolling pelvic motions. Their task is far easier though, since there is no unfounded and exaggerated fear of childirth’s pains in primitive societies.
Who would think of sending a man who has a sedentary job to run in Olympic races? Why then does Western society expect a woman, who has never used her pelvic muscles for more than just holding up her garter belt, to give birth easily, a feat more taxing for the muscles than any athletic competition?
Childbirth must be prepared for. Dormant muscles must be built up little by little, step by step. All it takes is a little work, which certainly would never harm the mother or the unborn child. Strengthening the muscles also helps in carrying the child through pregnancy and greatly reduces stretch marks on the abdomen.
Training classes, such as Education for Childbirth courses given at one of the major hospitals in New York City, try to accomplish in a few short months or weeks what should have been started in childhood: namely the shaping-up of pelvic muscles used in pregnancy and childbirth and to regain shape and muscle tone after birth.
The first lesson in the Exercise Review Sheet of that hospital says: "Concentration Exercises -- Object: to learn muscular control of muscle groups. Particular attention is paid to strong contraction and absolute relaxation of the rest of the body."
The technique of Oriental dancing is one of contractions and releases while all other muscles not involved in the movemen are relaxed.
Class 2 goes on: "Stand with knees easy, feet parallel and with the weight of the body well over the arches of your feet. Rock your pelvis upward, Tighten slowly your buttocks and lower abdominal muscles. . . Lying on your back, with legs bent, press back firmly on floor, contracting abdominal muscles at the same time -- release."
This is a position assumed in almost every Oriental dance at one point or another, where the head reaches the floor from a backbend and the body relaxes untill the spine rests on the floor. The knees are sharply bent and the feet outside of and close to the thighs. Slow rhythmic breathing is followed by fast shallow breathing, acceleration of which increases with contractions, producing a variety of abdominal movements.
One of the women, who attended classes of this sort, was the wife of a prominent lawyer of Turkish background and mother of twins. She told me that one of the movements her obstetrician stressed was a rippling movement of the abdomen, the old Arabic "belly roll" - what we now refer to as the "camel".
It was explained that the upper part of the wave, as her doctor termed the movement, was to be done between the contractions of the womb, and the lower part of the wave, or bearing down, was to be done as the womb contracted. This would aid the mother considerably in expelling the baby with minimal wear and tear on all the internal organs and muscles involved. Fighting the contractions through fear and preoccupation with the thought of pain would only tense the muscles and tear them rather than allow them to stretch gently during the uterine contractions and relaxations.
The rolling movement itself is no child’s play to learn, for when done wrong it only serves to stetch the stomach muscles. The lower spine, pelvis, diaphragm and abdomen are involved. This is extremely difficult to describe in writing & must be demonstrated, explained step by step, felt gradually muscle by muscle.
Each little muscle must be found and developed in turn, before the whole can be manipulated to the extent that each split second can be perfectly controlled. Rather than sharpness and angularity, there must be a smooth, circular, undulating motion.
Fortunately, the Turkish backround of the woman I mentioned gave her more than just a laywoman's knowledge of Oriental dancing and therefore a greater knowledge of and control over her pelvic muscles. Subsequently, she learned all the exercises with greater speed and facility than the average female produced by a society that is just discovering its hips via some of the newer social and Latin dances.
These are muscles that have been used by almost every Arabic and Turkish - speaker (and many others) from childhood on up, in the execution of some of their indigenous folk dances: vulgarly and wrongly referred to in Western society as the danse du ventre or, worse yet, belly dance.

About Morocco


About Morocco
Country Information
Use the “Quick Links” to browse through Country Information.


Dress respectfully if you do not wish to attract undue attention. This typically means covering your body between your knees and elbows e.g. trousers, long shorts or skirt to the knee (at least) and short-sleeved shirts or t-shirts. In summer, loose clothing is comfortable in the heat and when travelling; in spring & autumn, a warm fleece is needed for chilly evenings; and in winter, warm clothing is essential. In large cities such as Marrakech, Fes or Agadir, Moroccans dress as fashionably as they would on High Street in Europe although, in contrast, you will also see women traditionally dressed in derra (hood like scarf that covers all hair and is tied under chin) and jellaba (long-sleeved, ankle-length, flowing dress). In rural areas women usually wear traditional clothes and you are encouraged to dress more conservatively when touring.


morocco culture,moroccan food,morocco food,moroccan cuisine,morocco beaches,moroccan meal,beaches in morocco,moroccan culture,hercules cave,hercules cave morocco