In this kibbeh recipe, a mixture of bulgur wheat, onions, and ground beef forms a hollow shell for a delicious stuffing. Enveloped in warm and earthy Middle Eastern spices like allspice and ground cinnamon, kibbeh is the epitome of Middle Eastern comfort food. The kibbeh croquettes can be deep fried or baked, and are often served as mezze or side dish. See more on kibbeh and the step-by-step tutorial below!
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Stuffing kibbeh is a recreational activity that Middle Eastern women take as seriously as they do stuffing zucchini or rolling parcels of rice-filled cabbage leaves. It’s kind of a big deal. A rite of passage, if you will. If you grew in that part of the world, it’s assumed that your mother and the ladies of your community would have trained you to make kibbeh by the time you turned 15!
That was not the case for me. My closest encounter with kibbeh took place only a few years ago in my mother in-law’s Michigan kitchen. She made kibbeh in large batches on the regular. Some for the family, and a lot more for their then family-owned restaurant. I watched her form the kibbeh so precisely into small ovals, more like mini-footballs. She made it look so easy!
So What is Kibbeh?
I’ve heard kibbeh described as Middle Eastern meatballs–sort of.
The word kibbeh stems from an Arabic verb meaning, “to form into a ball;” so that description is not entirely wrong. But as you’ll see in today’s kibbeh recipe, they’re more like stuffed croquettes. There is a crispy outer shell made with bulgur wheat, onions, and finely ground beef. The shell is then stuffed with a mixture of spiced beef and toasted pine nuts; sealed and then fried or baked.
In today’s kibbeh recipe, I have attempted to follow the same football-like shape that my MIL taught me; although kibbeh can be formed into balls or even patties, whatever is easiest for you.
And there are many ways to prepare kibbeh–stuffed and then fried or baked like in today’s Kibbeh recipe. The Lebanese do raw kibbeh, or kibbeh nayya, which is a delicacy that resembles steak tartar. And there is also pan kibbeh, which we will make here in the future.
What to serve with Kibbeh?
Kibbeh is best served warm with tahini sauce, tzatziki or plain yogurt. Here I served it with this Mediterranean chickpea salad; you can also serve it with tabouli, fattoush salad, or even Greek salad.
Step-by-step tutorial for how to make kibbeh
(scroll down for the print-friendly recipe)
Cover a fine mesh strainer with a light cloth (a cheesecloth, if you have one). Add the bulgur wheat in, then place the strainer into a bowl filled with water. Let the fine bulgur wheat soak in the water for 15 minutes, then pull the cloth, holding the bulgur, and squeeze all the water out. You may do this a couple of times until you are sure the bulgur is rid of water. Set aside for now. (Once soaked, fine bulgur wheat is ready to eat. Coarse bulgur requires a little more time, as I outline in my bulgur cooking guide.)
Now make the kibbeh (the actual dough that you will later use to form the kibbeh shells). Put the onion, ground beef, spices and pinch of salt into the bowl of a large food processor. Process until the meat is very finely ground almost into a paste.
Transfer the meat mixture into a large bowl and add the bulgur wheat. Use damp hands to combine the bulgur with the meat mixture to make a dough. Cover and refrigerate until later.
Now make the filling. Heat about 1 tbsp olive oil in a skillet or frying pan. Saute the onion until just golden, then add the ground beef. Cook over medium heat, stirring occasionally until the meat is fully browned. Add the toasted pine nuts, the spices, and the salt and pepper. Stir to combine. Remove from the heat and set aside to cool.
Remove the kibbeh dough from the fridge. To stuff the kibbeh, you need to have damp hands. Place a small bowl of water next to you. Prepare a baking sheet and line it with parchment paper.
With both the bowl of kibbeh dough and the filling near, you can begin stuffing the kibbeh. Dampen your hands with some water, take a handful of the kibbeh dough (about 2 tbsp or so) and form into somewhat of an oval-shaped disc in the palm of one hand. Use your finger to make a well in the middle of the disc, and gradually hallow the disc out to make a larger well or hole for the filling.
Using a spoon, add about 1 tablespoon of the filling. Seal the dough on top and, using both hands, carefully shape it into an oval (football-type shape).
Place the stuffed kibbeh on the baking sheet lined with parchment paper. Repeat the stuffing steps until you run out of ingredients, be sure to have damp hands throughout.
Chill the stuffed kibbeh for 1 hour, this is a very important step!
[And if you do not plan to cook the entire batch of kibbeh croquettes, this would be the time to freeze. See the freezing instructions in the recipe notes section below]
To fry, heat the oil in a deep frying pan to 350 degrees F (you’ll want the oil hot enough that you can see some gentle bubbling, but not too hot where it will burn the kibbeh shells). Deep-fry the kibbeh in the hot oil, in batches being carefully not to crowd them, until the kibbeh shells are brown (about 5 minutes or so).
[I show only one kibbeh here to help you see, but you can certainly fry a few at a time, just make sure they fit nicely in the frying pan]
With a slotted spoon or tongs, carefully remove the kibbeh and place them on a pan lined with paper towel to drain. Repeat until you have fried all the stuffed kibbeh.
[Alternately, you can bake the kibbeh. Preheat the oven to 400 degrees F. Spray the stuffed kibbeh with olive oil, and arrange them in a single layer, spaced out, on a large baking sheet. Bake until deep golden brown, likely about 30 minutes or so, but this will vary].
Serve hot or at room temperature with tahini sauce, tzatziki sauce or plain Greek yogurt. Enjoy!
Kibbeh Recipe (How to Make Kibbeh)
- Total Time: 2 hours 15 minutes
- Yield: 24-30 pieces 1x
Description
In this kibbeh recipe, a mixture of bulgur wheat, onions, and ground beef forms a hollow shell for a delicious stuffing. Enveloped in warm and earthy Middle Eastern spices like allspice and ground cinnamon, kibbeh is the epitome of Middle Eastern comfort food. The kibbeh croquettes can be deep fried or baked, and are often served as mezze or side dish. See more on kibbeh and the step-by-step tutorial below!
Ingredients
For the Kibbeh (the actual dough that forms the kibbeh shells)
- 2 1/2 cups fine bulgur wheat
- Water
- 1 large onion, quartered
- 1 1/2 lb lean ground beef (or lamb)
- 2 tsp ground allspice
- 1 tsp ground coriander
- 1/2 tsp ground cinnamon
- 1 tsp black pepper
- Pinch salt
- Oil for frying
For the Meat Filling
- Olive oil
- 1 medium yellow onion, finely chopped or grated
- 1 lb ground lamb or beef (I used beef here), cold
- 1/3 cup toasted pine nuts
- 1 tsp ground allspice
- 1/2 tsp ground cinnamon
- Pinch salt and pepper
Instructions
- Cover a fine mesh strainer with a light cloth (a cheesecloth, if you have one). Add the bulgur wheat in, then place the strainer into a bowl filled with water. Let the fine bulgur wheat soak in the water for 15 minutes, then pull the cloth, holding the bulgur, and squeeze all the water out. You may do this a couple of times until you are sure the bulgur is rid of water. Set aside for now.
- Now make the kibbeh (the actual dough that you will later use to form the kibbeh shells). Put the onion, ground beef, spices and pinch of salt into the bowl of a large food processor. Process until the meat is very finely ground almost into a paste. Transfer the meat mixture into a large bowl and add the bulgur wheat. Use damp hands to combine the bulgur with the meat mixture to make a dough. Cover and refrigerate until later.
- Now make the filling. Heat about 1 tbsp olive oil in a skillet or frying pan. Saute the onion until just golden, then add the ground beef. Cook over medium heat, stirring occasionally until the meat is fully browned. Add the toasted pine nuts, the spices, and the salt and pepper. Stir to combine. Remove from the heat and set aside to cool.
- Remove the kibbeh dough from the fridge.
- To stuff the kibbeh, you need to have damp hands. Place a small bowl of water next to you. Prepare a baking sheet and line it with parchment paper.
- With both the bowl of kibbeh dough and the filling near, you can begin stuffing the kibbeh. Dampen your hands with some water, take a handful of the kibbeh dough (about 2 tbsp or so) and form into somewhat of an oval-shaped disc in the palm of one hand. Use your finger to make a well in the middle of the disc, and gradually hallow the disc out to make a larger well or hole for the filling. Using a spoon, add about 1 tablespoon of the filling. Seal the dough on top and, using both hands, carefully shape it into an oval (football-type shape). Place the stuffed kibbeh on the baking sheet lined with parchment paper. Repeat the stuffing steps until you run out, be sure to have damp hands throughout.
- Chill the stuffed kibbeh for 1 hour.
- Heat the oil in a deep frying pan to 350 degrees F (you’ll want the oil hot enough that you can see some gentle bubbling, but not too hot where it will burn the kibbeh shells). Deep-fry the kibbeh in the hot oil, in batches being carefully not to crowd them, until the kibbeh shells are brown (about 5 minutes or so). With a slotted spoon or tongs, carefully remove the kibbeh and place them on a pan lined with paper towel to drain. Repeat until you have fried all the stuffed kibbeh.
- Serve hot or at room temprature with tahini sauce, tzatziki sauce or plain Greek yogurt. Enjoy!
Notes
- It is important that the kibbeh dough remains cool as you work with it. So if you think it will take you longer to finish the stuffing process (steps 5&6), place the bowl of kibbeh dough in a larger bowl filled with ice.
- If you prefer to bake the kibbeh croquettes–Preheat the oven to 400 degrees F. Spray the stuffed kibbeh with olive oil, and arrange them in a single layer, spaced out, on a large baking sheet. Bake until deep golden brown (likely about 30 minutes or so, but this will vary).
- To freeze the kibbeh– You can easily freeze the kibbeh after stuffing. Instead of simply chilling for an hour (step #7), you can arrange the kibbeh on a baking sheet and freeze for an hour or two. Take the baking sheet out of the freezer, once the kibbeh have hardened, and transfer the kibbeh to a freezer-safe container or even large zip lock bags. Freeze until you are ready to use. You can cook these from frozen, do not thaw.
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- Prep Time: 1 hour 45 mins
- Cook Time: 30 mins
- Category: Sides
- Method: Baked
- Cuisine: Middle Eastern
If I bake these directly from the freezer, what temperature/baking time do you recommend?
Great question, Nunu! You can bake the kibbeh at 400 F degrees. Use a heavy sheet pans and brush it well with olive oil and give the kibbeh a brush of olive as well.Enjoy
Just needed a refresher havnt made it in a long time sounds great.
Awesome!
Can i whizz course bulgar in food processor if I have no fine bulgar. ….for use in kibbeh.?
Hi Susan, unfortunately you won’t get the exact same texture. You need the fine bulgur.
can you use 7 spice in the kibbeh paste
Yes, you can certainly use 7 spice here.
Hi. Can I make this recipe the day before and have in fridge rather than freezing. If not Will freezing change the flavor. Will it take longer to fry. Thanks
Hi Lisa, You sure can make this the day before and place it in the fridge, tightly cover it though.
Thank you for the recipe. I’m expecting 25 guests and will serve kibbeh as a main dish next to tabbouleh and hummus, please how many do I need? Regards
Hi there, this recipe will make about 24-30 pieces. So it would cover the number of people you’re having if you’re counting on each eating 1 kibbeh. I’m guessing if this is your main dish,that would not be enough. If you double the recipe, you would get 2-3 large pieces per person, which seems better. So it really depends on how many pieces per guest you’d like to serve.
Wonderful recipe!! I noticed U are using a food processor to mince the meat into a paste….does this process work just well as the meat grinder. Or do I have to finely mince the meat through a grinder couple of times to get the paste consistency?
Hi there! To be honest, I only use a food processor for this recipe. It works well for me.
I have wanted to make kibbeh for many years and was always too afraid to try it. After googling kibbeh recipes, I found your site. After reading through the recipe, tutorial and looking at your great photos, I decided I could do this! It was so easy! Your proportions are perfect – I ended up running out of the filling and the “wrap” at the exact same time! Mine probably ended up a bit too big and not looking exactly like your perfect little football shapes but they got better towards the end.
The kibbeh were delicious! Exactly like I remembered them from so many years ago. My husband even mentioned that he wouldn’t mind having kibbeh for breakfast! 🙂
Judy, thank you so much for trying this recipe! And for taking the time to share your feedback!!! I am so glad you and your husband enjoyed it.
Hi Suzy – this is a serious tutorial about making kibbeh. I’d never even heard of it and now I’m craving it. I swear I can almost smell it – so delish!
Oh, Allie, it is so good, friend! Hope you give it a try sometime. Thanks for stopping in.
This reminds me of a minced chicken fritters my mother makes!!! So much flavour, and I’ve always wanted to cook with bulgur wheat!
You would love these, Tina!
I have never tried anything like this. What a unique recipe that is a great step by step in making the recipe
Thank you, Maria! Hope you give it a try sometime.
I absolutely love your recipes, Suzy! I am trying this scrumptious Kibbeh later during the week! Thanks!
Thank you, Tania! That means a lot to me. Hope you enjoy the kibbeh.
Wow, this is a fabulous post — I love your step by step tutorial! I make falafel all the time, but I’ve never attempted kibbeh, thanks for the delicious lesson 🙂
Thanks a bunch, Sue! Hope you give it a try…and if you do, let me know what ya think!
Great tutorial! I’ve never had (or made) kibbeh, but now that you’ve shown me what I’ve been missing, I’d love to try it!
Oh I hope you try it, Lisa! So good! Thanks for stopping in.
Thanks for the recipe! I have a kibbeh attachment for my sausage stuffer and have never used it. I’ll have to give this a try. I have some lamb in the freezer that I should use up.
This recipe sort of sounds like meat stuffed with more meat. 😉
That’s awesome, John! Hope you try it soon!
Thanks for sharing this wonderful recipe.
You are most welcome, Jovina! Hope you enjoy it!
Soo grateful to find this recipe, I absolutely love Lebanese dishes and now I can try them out! Do you have the eggplant stuffed kibbeh recipe?
Thank you, Jandyn! Glad to have you here. I don’t have the eggplant stuffed kibbeh…however, here’s a stuffed eggplant recipe you might like: https://www.themediterraneandish.com/stuffed-eggplant-with-spiced-ground-beef-and-bulgur/