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As well as drinking tea at every opportunity,
the Circassians make a special infusion of their
own from fresh pine cones, and this fragrant
red tea is said to be good for the stomach and
digestive complaints. Traditional Circassian
generosity and hospitality are displayed in
lavish and cheerful meals. Dishes tend to be
filling, and meat and milk products such as
yoghurt predominate. One speciality is haluj,
a triangular fried pastry filled with cheese
or walnuts, which is eaten instead of bread
with yoghurt, clotted cream, butter and honey.
When paying visits to relatives and friends,
guests often cook a batch of haluj to take as
a present. Another delicious dish is boiled
chicken served in a sauce called sipsi made
of maize flour, walnuts, butter, coriander and
other ingredients cooked slowly over a wood
fire in a special earthenware casserole known
as a çöven. This is eaten with 'pasta', a kind
of soft bread made of maize flour which is also
cooked in a çöven.
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