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Iran — Persian rice cooking tradition; central to Iranian feast culture across all occasions Techniques

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Iran — Persian rice cooking tradition; central to Iranian feast culture across all occasions
Tahdig
Iran — Persian rice cooking tradition; central to Iranian feast culture across all occasions
Tahdig is the Persian crispy rice crust — the golden, crackling underside of a pot of Iranian chelo (steamed rice) that is arguably the most prized part of any Persian meal. The word literally means 'bottom of the pot', and the technique of creating it is one of the most refined in Persian cooking: a deliberate process of encouraging a thick, even crust to form across the bottom of the pot without burning. The method begins with properly washed basmati rice parboiled until almost-but-not-quite cooked, then returned to the pot with fat (oil or ghee) and a small amount of water on very low heat. The pot is covered with a kitchen towel wrapped around the lid to absorb condensation — a critical step, since water dripping back onto the crust prevents it from forming properly. The rice steams for 40–50 minutes on the lowest possible heat. The result: the upper rice is perfectly fluffy and separate, each grain independent; the bottom layer is a thick, golden, shattering crust of compressed, fried rice grains. The tahdig should release cleanly from the pot when inverted — if it tears, the rice was either undercooked when returned to the pot or the fat was insufficient. Variations include lavash tahdig (a layer of thin flatbread as the crust), potato tahdig (thin potato slices forming the bottom layer), and lettuce tahdig. Each variation produces a different crust texture — bread tahdig is crispier and more even; potato tahdig has a heavier, more substantial bite.
Provenance 1000 — Pantry