Note: If you don't want to eat this dish with your hands, use a fork and knife or chopsticks instead. To make this even easier to use, place a heat-safe plate on the bottom of the wok (underneath the wok) and simply remove it upon serving. It has a shallow bottom so that ingredients don't sit in their own grease while being cooked. Note: The proper cooking pot for Zohioliin Duu Tatah is a round-bottomed wok called a "darig". Note: If the dough is too sticky after kneading, add more flour until it's no longer sticky. And maybe with enough practice, we can all become true masters of Zohioliin Duu Tatah. Hopefully, this recipe will help us to make Zohioliin Duu Tatah many times at home, or perhaps even make our own modifications to the original dish.
The secrets of Zohioliin Duu Tatah are now ours to keep - not Khanaakh's. Here is our recipe for Zohioliin Duu Tatah: Our first attempt was successful! With more practice, we think we can perfect this dish so that no one ever has to go hungry again. After that, it would be nothing more than a story, lost to the sands of time.īelieve it or not, this is our first attempt trying to cook Zohioliin Duu Tatah at home. The resulting meal was so delicious it soon spread throughout Khanaakh and became known as one of their original dishes.
With no food or water available, they made due with what was available: wild onions and a small handful of rice, which they cooked together in a pot over an open fire. It's said that the first people to cook it were traveling through Khanaakh and were weary from hunger and journey. What we do know is that this dish has been a staple of their cuisine for as long as anyone can remember. The secrets of Zohioliin Duu Tatah are lost to the sands of time.