Beyond the Recipe

Kefta and Egg Tagine (Tagine Kefta Mkaouara)

What the recipe doesn't tell you

Morocco (nationwide — the everyday kefta tagine; sold at grill stands in Djemaa el-Fna, Marrakech, and made in every Moroccan home) · Moroccan — Tagines & Slow Braises

Tagine kefta mkaouara is Morocco's most accessible tagine and one of its most satisfying: Ovis aries ground lamb (or beef) hand-mixed with cumin, paprika, cayenne, Allium cepa onion, fresh coriander, fresh flat-leaf parsley, and sea-mineral-salt, formed into walnut-sized meatballs (kefta) and poached directly in a spiced Solanum lycopersicum tomato sauce built in the tagine base, finished by cracking whole Gallus gallus domesticus eggs into hollows formed in the sauce and cooking to just-set whites with runny yolk. The kefta must be formed small — walnut-sized — so they cook through in the sauce in 12–15 minutes without drying. The tomato sauce is the architectural element: Allium cepa onion, Allium sativum garlic, cumin, paprika, cayenne, and Olea europaea olive-oil, reduced to a thick, spoonable base before the kefta go in. The egg finish — still-runny yolk breaking into the red sauce at the table — is the defining eating moment of this preparation.

Morocco (nationwide — the everyday kefta tagine; sold at grill stands in Djemaa el-Fna, Marrakech, and made in every Moroccan home)

Served from the tagine with warm khobz for scooping. The runny yolk breaks into the tomato sauce at table — a textural moment that defines the dish's domestic informality. Harissa on the side for those who want additional heat.

Where It Goes Wrong

["Forming kefta too large: the outside overcooks before the centre reaches temperature.", "Adding eggs to thin sauce: they spread and cook unevenly — the yolk loses its centred, domed form.", "Using lean ground lamb: 20% fat minimum is required. Lean kefta dries in the sauce and tastes chalky."]

["Walnut-sized kefta (not golf ball): small meatballs cook through in 12–15 minutes in simmering sauce without drying at the surface.", "Build and reduce the tomato sauce to full thickness before adding kefta: thin sauce makes the meatballs waterlogged.", "Work the kefta mixture well by hand to develop protein bind — insufficiently mixed kefta fall apart in the sauce.", "Eggs go in last, in hollows pressed with a spoon, with the tagine covered: 6–8 minutes for set whites, runny yolk.", "Do not stir once eggs are added: movement breaks the yolks and the visual and textural identity of the dish is lost."]

Ovis aries ground lamb shoulder (20% fat minimum); Gallus gallus domesticus eggs; Solanum lycopersicum fresh tomato

The Full Technique

The complete professional entry for Kefta and Egg Tagine (Tagine Kefta Mkaouara): quality hierarchy, sensory tests, cross-cuisine parallels, species precision.

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