Musakhan is considered by many Palestinians the national dish — roasted chicken on flatbread, buried under a mountain of sumac-stained caramelised onions, finished with pine nuts and olive oil. The technique that makes it is the onion: cooked low and slow in generous olive oil until completely collapsed, sweet, and deeply coloured, absorbing the spice coating from the chicken and the olive oil into a unified, unctuous topping. The bread beneath absorbs the rendering chicken fat and the onion-sumac juices — it is simultaneously plate and ingredient.
Onions slow-cooked in olive oil with sumac and allspice until completely caramelised and collapsed, used to top marinated roasted chicken pieces on flatbread. The onion cooking is the technical centre of the dish — it requires patience and sufficient fat to produce the correct unctuous, deeply sweet result.
Musakhan succeeds when the onion, chicken, bread, sumac, and olive oil become indistinguishable from each other — each element has given something to the others. The sumac cuts through the fat, the bread absorbs the juices, the chicken provides the protein anchor. It is a dish about accumulation and absorption rather than distinct components.
- Generous olive oil — the onions must have enough fat to soften completely without frying. [VERIFY ratio: approximately 4 tbsp oil per 4 large onions] - Low-medium heat, long time — 45–60 minutes minimum for full collapse and caramelisation [VERIFY time] - Sumac added in stages — some at the beginning to stain the onions, more at the end to preserve its bright character - The bread must be warmed before assembly — cold bread is rigid and won't absorb the juices - Roasting juices from the chicken pan go directly over the assembled dish — they are the finishing sauce
OTTOLENGHI JERUSALEM — Technique Entries OT-01 through OT-25