Saturday 29 September 2007

What is Mongolian food like?

[question from John, Miguel, Sophie, Louisa, Annabel, Theodora and Ed]

As it doesn’t rain that much in Mongolia, and the winters are so cold, Mongolian people find it very difficult to grow vegetables and fruit. This means that most meals are based around other things. Over the last five weeks of my stay in Ulaanbaatar, I’ve mostly been eating meat. Mongolians definitely like to eat meat – it’s quite difficult to live here and be a vegetarian! They also like fatty foods. I suppose they eat a lot of fat so that they can be comfortable in the very cold winters.

The two most traditional Mongolian dishes are ‘hoshur’ and ‘buuz’.

Buuz are small dumplings filled with mutton and herbs. When eating them, one usually takes a small bite to get through the pastry, and then sucks out the juice from inside. Mongolians are very happy to make noise at the dinner table (it’s a sign of appreciation of the meal), so slurping is definitely allowed!


Hoshur are large flat pastries filled with steak and gravy. The best way to describe them is that they look a bit like flat cornish pasties. Whenever I want to treat my myself I go to a local cafĂ© and buy some hoshur – I love them!



I was lucky enough to see how both were made when I stayed with a Mongolian family. In the photos below you can see Chimgee and Bud making them:


Cutting and rolling the dough

Filling the dough circles up with meat & herbs

Closing up the dough parcels. The buuz are ready to cook!

Mongolians wash all this food down with a variety of drinks. The most popular is called ‘suutei tse’, which is a very milky tea. Suutei tse is prepared in a big cauldron which is filled with milk. Once the milk is boiling some tea and spices are added, together with some butter. The result is a very warming and quite rich drink. I quite like it, but my fellow British friends aren’t too sure about it… Adults like to drink vodka and a special drink called ‘airag’. Airag is made from fermented horse’s milk. Whilst I like to eat and drink almost anything, this was a bit too much for me – it tasted like vinegar. Mongolians seem to love it though!

Some of the perhaps more unusual things that Mongolians eat are:

Camels,
Horses,
Sheep’s heads!

I hope to try all of them before I leave, so I’ll tell you how they taste in the future…

Sunday 2 September 2007

Welcome to Project Mongolia!


Dear pupils of St Peter's School,

I'm writing to you for Mongolia's capital city, Ulaanbaatar. It's a beautiful day outside - the sky is blue and everyone in the city is relaxed as it's the weekend. The only thing that's spoiling it is the traffic outside. Mongolian drivers like to use their car horns a lot!

It's been a while since I came to St Peter's School to talk to you about Project Mongolia. Since then I've been settling in to my new life in Mongolia. It's been a busy, but fun time. I hope you all have had a good break over the summer and are now settled back at school. Thank you all so much for the lovely letters that you wrote me. Thank you also for all the lovely pictures you drew. I've stuck the letters up on the walls of my room, which has really made the room very colourful. If I have a bad day I only need to look at your letters and I'll be cheered up!

In your letters you asked me many questions. Over the coming weeks I'll try to answer as many of them as possible. I'll answer one of your questions each week, and will display information and photos on this webpage. If you ever have any more questions about Mongolia and the lives of the Mongolian people then please send them to me (click on the 'comments' link at the bottom of this message and you can leave your question/comment there).

Best wishes from Mongolia to you all,

Robert