Showing posts with label Iranian food. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Iranian food. Show all posts

Saturday, 14 June 2014

THE ROUND UP- Costs, Myths and Final Thoughts about Iran

....previously, around the Caspian in Iran......

As we’ve said previously in posts, the best thing about Iran by a mile is the people. Everyone knows they are friendly, but until you are here, you cannot imagine the genuine hospitality and consideration they show their guests. It’s true they adore foreigners, probably because they so rarely see them, and it was not at all uncommon in our travels for complete strangers on the street to welcome us to their country or tell us they love us!

As for the sights, it was the desert, especially in Sistan Baluchistan that captured our hearts. The ragged mountains, the gorgeous colours, the desert castles, the mud brick villages, the total lack of other tourists and the more than welcoming locals, made our time so special in this area. Other highlights were the unique culture of the Persian Gulf towns, the unique cave village of Meymand near Kerman, and the completely different, green and lush village of Masouleh in the far north of Iran.

In some ways our three months in Iran flew, and in other ways we seem to have packed such of lot of adventures and fantastic experiences into such a short time. Literally just after Richard was finally granted his visa in Delhi, the rules for UK passport holders changed, and now, like the Americans, Brits are only allowed into Iran as part of a tour group, and no independent travel is allowed.  So, although we would absolutely love to return to this amazing country as soon as possible, it very sadly will not be on the cards for us until the government changes the visa rules.


The lush mountains..........

....and the dry desert- hard to believe it's the same country


FOOD

We had heard mixed reports about the food in Iran- some raved about it, but most said it was pretty average. Maybe we are easy to please and needed a change from Indian food, or maybe it was because we stayed in people’s home so often, that we found the food to be unbelievably delicious and varied.

Often several dishes (khoresht or stews) are served with either rice with a crusty top or one of many different kinds of bread (our favourites were lavash and sangat). Ingredients for the stews include eggplant, chickpeas, beans, tomato, pumpkin (kaju), and lamb, chicken, beef or fish in coastal areas. Other common dishes include kashk, a yogurt based sauce in any number of different styles; ash, a soupy dish with meat and vegetables; various kinds of kebabs (our favourite was the yogurt marinated lari with beef or chicken); biryanizaresht polo, chicken and rice with delicious barberries which we think might be unique to Irankukoo, an frittata-type dish with egg and potato; olviyeh, a potato and egg based salad eaten in long bread rolls; fessun jun, an unusual sweet dish made with chicken, pomegranate and walnuts; and ghormeh sabzi which is close to a national dish, and Sal’s overall favourite.


Typical Iranian feast,  Chabahar

Simple but tasty omelette breakfast, Zahedan

Healthy breakfast, Zahedan

Kebab man, Bandar Abbas

"Light" dinner of salad and rolls

Another feast

Yet another Iranian feast

A variation on the Turkish dish, dolmade

Iranians love their rice with a crust

One of the many varieties of ash, a delicious soup

Farm feast


The mixed green herbs (mint, basil, garlic chives and other unidentified salad items) that accompanied many meals were also great.

Alcohol is strictly forbidden, although we’ve already talked about its availability. Iranians love a malt drink packaged to look exactly like beer, and actually tastes quite a lot like beer, but of course has no alcohol. We couldn’t really get into that one. Alternative options included doogh, a fermented, salty yogurt drink, often mixed with mint-(it’s better than it sounds); carrot juice and ice cream (again, sounds weird, tastes great!); banana and melon shakes; and any number of delicious juices. But tea is the number one drink in Iran, sometimes made with cardamom and sweetened with various kinds of sugar. It is served in every home, and we came to the conclusion that Iranians have bladders of steel due to drinking copious amounts of tea since a young age! We were forever running to the toilet.


Fake beer

Iranian juice


Fruit was abundantly available cheaply, varied from region to region, and included pomegranates, strawberries, sweet oranges, mulberries, melons, dates, grapes, apricots, figs, sweet and sour cherries.
Desserts are popular, with ice cream leading the way, and falooda a close second. Most ice cream is flavoured with rose water, cardamom, saffron or pistachio, and falooda (a noodle like substance made of corn starch, eaten through most of Asia and the Middle East, but originating in Iran,) comes in different varieties depending on the region. Dates and fruit are often served after a meal as a dessert. Kolompe is a famous date biscuit from Kerman we became addicted to while there, and klucheh fuman it’s walnut yummy counterpart in the north near Rasht.


Massive strawberry, Kerman

Yazd ice-cream

Mulberries are very common in Iran

Ginger cakes, Masouleh

Iranians love to eat, and that includes in between meals. Popular snacks include sandwiches (baguette rolls filled with hot meat and salad), falafel in bread rolls, tomushi (a thin pancake similar to the Indian dosa with various savoury fillings), olives, tokh me (sunflower or pumpkin seeds), nuts (especially walnuts), chocolates, biscuits..... it’s no wonder we’ve left Iran with huge bellys!


Iranian snacks

Oliveyeh salad (like potato salad)

Enjoying felafelAhvas

Felafel toppings

Rich's favourite, famous Iranian carrot jam!


Fast food is very popular, and when we weren’t staying with families we indulged in pizza and lamb and chicken kebabs, which were all excellent.

Food is always eaten sitting down together as a group, usually on the floor, with a plastic sheet as a table cloth. Sally struggled with the speed with which Iranians ate, with them preferring to chow down the meal quickly, clear up, and then sit back and relax. Rich struggled with his knee becoming painful after sitting for long stretches, although, of course, Iranians were very sensitive about this, and always offered for him to sit on a chair!


TRAVEL COSTS

Because we stayed with local hosts for most of the time in Iran, we had a different experience to if we had been travelling as we usually do, and the matter of costs was totally skewed. Some days we didn’t spend a cent (or weren’t allowed to!), and other days we spent more than we ever would in SE Asia. The four or five hotels we stayed in charged between 250,000 rial (US $8.30), and 700,000 rial (US$ 23). A meal in a basic restaurant cost between 50,000 and 200,000 rial (US$1.50- US$6.50) for the two of us with soft drinks. A smoke on a shisha with tea in a cafe cost about 50,000 rial (US$1.50). Fruit and snacks were very cheap, as were juices and other drinks. Travel was quite cheap, due to the price of petrol being 30 cents per liter. There are many different types of buses to choose from, but we usually just got on the first one going. The VIP buses with only three seats across seemed to cost a bit more. Share taxis are very common, and only cost a bit more than buses, but the drivers are invariably mad, and we avoided them like the plague.Trains were the cheapest form of transport, but also the slowest. The biggest expense by far for us was the entrance fees. We didn’t notice this at all during the first month of our trip, as things in the south and east are either free or very cheap (or people were so happy to see us they didn’t charge us at all!), but when we reached the more popular destinations such as YazdShiraz and Tehran, we had to be more careful. Although not terribly expensive (most sights were 150,000 rial (US$5)), the prices added up if we both wanted to see several things on one day, or in one city. It is the result of a recent Government idea to charge foreigners eight times more than locals for most tourist sites.


Inside Iranian train carriage

Typically nice Iranian bus

Inside typical Iranian bus


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A last few oddities, we couldn’t fit in elsewhere!

We heard that in big cities in Iran, if you are caught driving your dog in your car, you could be fined, have the dog taken away, or even the car!

Nose jobs are hugely popular in Iran, and so many, mainly women, walk around proudly displaying their bandages. Apparently it’s a bit of a status symbol!

When registering a baby’s name, the list to chose from is strict, and it cannot be a Western name!

When getting married, all couples must legally sign a pre-nuptial agreement, in which the man promises to give the woman money and gold if they get divorced. This could explain the low divorce rate!

Sunday, 8 June 2014

DESERT ROCK CASTLES - Two weeks in and around Kerman, Iran




The areas we visited around Kerman


Most of our hosts so far in Iran had been males- it was just the way it turned out. We consciously looked for a female Couchsurfing host in Kerman, and were very lucky to come across her and her daughter. The quiet and thoughtful host and her energetic daughter are long time Couchsurfing hosts, but have been scared off in recent years by police checks. Couchsurfing is officially illegal in Iran, some say, others profess its fine, but the police are often suspicious of foreigners staying with Iranians. They have a beautiful apartment in Kerman with our first Western toilet of Iran! Most homes and restaurants have the squat variety.


Lovely apartment, Kerman

Sal with our hosts



Our first sight of the towering snow capped mountains around the town had us a little worried, but the temperature was not too cold. Actually, cold weather in Iran is not such a big deal. Unlike India, they are well set up for it, with all homes and hotels having hot water showers and heating in cooler months. Very civilized! We also saw and met our first non-Iranian tourist in Iran in Kerman!

Our first task in Kerman was to get a visa extension. All the trouble we had in Delhi getting our Iranian visa  was only for a one month stay, and unbelievably that month was up. We’d heard negative stories about obtaining an extension here, so we were very relieved when the English speaking policeman at the headquarters gave us another month’s stay in exchange for US$10, although it did take 5 hours due to a “system failure”.

Happy we had more time in this amazing country, we set out to see the sights around Kerman town. It’s a big, desert town, which in some ways seems to be quite modern with many young trendies around town, but also more black chadors than we've seen before. Apparently people who work for the Government have a strict dress code, with a full head scarf with no hair showing, black or brown colours, and usually a chador for women all being compulsory. Hopefully these people get to dress down during their time off. We loved seeing our host transform from her dark tent-like work clothes to a colourful Indian dress when she arrived home.


Local woman, Kerman

Large door knocker, Kerman


The Grand Bazaar is a beautiful design, unfortunately full of Chinese imports, but the traditional tea house was a real treat. We’d never seen such a place- an old haman, with paintings, vaulted ceilings, tiles and carpets everywhere. We had tea and kelyun (water pipe) and lingered for hours enjoying the atmosphere.


Enjoying kelyun, teahouse, Kerman

Old teahouse, Kerman

Interesting Sufi man, Kerman

Bazar roof, Kerman


Another highlight was an abandoned fort on the outskirts of town. We enjoyed the views and clambering around the ruins- actually it’s one of our favourite things to do, and there are so many opportunities in Iran!


Rock castle, Kerman

Remain of old castle, Kerman

Old mud castle, Kerman


Other things of interest around Kerman were the Jamed Masjid (Friday Mosque- every town has one), lovely library building, beehive shaped ice storage house, the Contemporary Arts Gallery (we found it hard to get around the gallery because of the friendly people who constantly approached us to chat), various tombs, and the Zoroastrian Fire Temple (sounds more exciting than it actually was!)


The stunning Masjid Jameh, Kerman

Sufi shrine, Kerman

Tiles in a mosque, Kerman


Our host took us to Mahan one afternoon, a small town about half an hour from Kerman, and we were able to take advantage of her local knowledge at the beautiful Sufi mausoleum there. She found the sleeping guard, we paid him a little something, and he let us in the special payer room of the Sufi saint, and best of all, out onto the roof and up into the minarets- it was such a gorgeous view with the snow-capped mountains in the background.


Mahan Gardens

Inside the Sufi shrine, Mahan

Sufi shrine rooftop with snowy mountains, Mahan

On the roof of the Sufi shrine, Mahan


Despite working in the morning, then taking us to Mahan, Ati insisted on making us fessen jun that evening, a famous Iranian dish with chicken in a pomegranate and walnut sauce. We repeatedly offered to help but she insisted, in a typically Iranian way, for us to relax, and although we felt bad, we were very happy to eat the delicious meal!


The famous fessen jun


We knew the famous citadel at Bam had been severely damaged in the 2003 earthquake, that killed more than 30,000 people in the town, but we love old ruined forts so much, we decided to take the trip from Kerman to see it. We were very disappointed by the whole experience. There was nothing at all left of the arg (fort), and the one section had been rebuilt lacked any ambience what-so-ever. There were strict paths that couldn’t be left, supposedly because of the danger, and guards with whistles to enforce this. Many areas were off-limits, and even reconstructed buildings such a little shops were closed. Add to this a dark and drizzly day, a lifeless and shut down town because of the last day of the No Ruz holiday, and a very average guesthouse (our first in a month!), and we were happy to return to Kerman the next day.


Bam citadel pre earthquake (picture from internet)

Bam citadel post earthquake (picture from internet)


Pile of rubble, Bam citadel

Restored part of Bam Citadel

Bam citadel

Partially restored part of Bam citadel


Our next adventure was the Kaluts, an area in the desert north of Kerman with amazing rock formations. Our first attempt to see this area involved a suicidal shared taxi driver (texting and driving at 140 kms per hours on hairpin bends); an exploration of Shahdad, the gateway town to the area; an invitation to lunch followed by a lift to the Kaluts by two local men; an interesting time at their house eating a very nice lunch that for them, included copious amounts of opium; a nap; a change of plan due to them being off their heads, and us returning to Kerman with another maniac taxi driver!!



Old mud brick village near Shahdad

Scenery around Shahdad


Luckily, our lovely host very generously took a day off work and drove us, her daughter and another Couchsurfer one hour or so on the stunningly beautiful road back to Shahdad, and into the Kaluts area. The rock formations are interesting in that from a distance they appear to be buildings-an old city or a fort, but on a closer look, they are all natural. We were so lucky to be able to stop and walk around the desolate, deserted area and take pictures, and stare in awe. It’s one of the hottest places on earth, and even at this time of year (Spring) the temperature soared. It must be unbearable in Summer. 









The day included two other wonderful stops- one at an ancient underground water well (qanat in Persian), and an atmospheric old caravanserai (a stop for traders and their livestock travelling on the Silk Route), which were as great as the Kaluts themselves.


Old caravanserai, Kaluts

A stop for traders in ancient times

Caravanserai, Kaluts

Ancient underground qanat (water system), Kaluts

Being silly in the road, Kaluts

Scenery driving back from Kaluts

Kaluts village