Pan Kabap

Pan Kabap

The dish is essentially a stripped-back tonur kebab: thin slices of fatty lamb, cumin, sweet chilli pepper powder, salt, no marinade and no skewer. The pleasure is in what you don't add. Cumin coats the slices in layered passes (two or three small sprinkles rather than one large dump), so the spice toasts gently into the rendering fat instead of scorching. The result is meat that tastes intensely of cumin and lamb fat with a deep gold sear on the edges. Smell carries across a flat: cumin and animal fat at high heat is one of the most evocative aromas in Central Asian cooking. Genuinely fast and forgiving as long as you respect two rules: the lamb must have fat on it, and the pan must already be smoking when the meat goes in. The home-kitchen version of a tradition that's centuries old across Xinjiang, the Hexi Corridor and into Kazakhstan, whenever a household couldn't fire up a clay oven for skewers, this is what they cooked instead.

Uyghur 20 minutes Serves1-2