Syrian cuisine

Syrian specialties makes use of eggplant, zucchini, garlic, meat (mostly from lamb and sheep), sesame seeds, rice, chickpeas, fava beans, lentils, steak, cabbage, cauliflower, vine leaves, pickled turnips, cucumbers, tomatoes, olive oil, lemon juice, mint, pistachios, honey and fruits.

Selections of appetizers known as mezze are customarily served along with Arabic bread before the Syrian meal's main course, which is followed by coffee, with sweet confections or fruits at will.

[1] A variety of Syrian dishes made from a fried, baked, grilled, cooked, or raw mixture of bulghur and minced lamb are called kibbe (كبّة).

A famous dish served in Syria is made from vegetables (usually zucchini—كوسا / kūsā, or eggplant—باذنجان / bādhinjān) which are stuffed (محشي / maḥshī) with ground beef or lamb or mutton, nuts, and rice.

Syrian street food includes: Media related to Cuisine of Syria at Wikimedia Commons

A typical Middle Eastern meal
Kebab khashkhash from Aleppo
Baking flat bread in the 1910s
Falafil and hummus in a Syrian breakfast
Dried-apricot paste ( qamar ad-din )
Pastry counter at a Syrian restaurant in Little Syria (Manhattan), 1910
Special edition of 5-year-aged Arak al-Hayat ( 'ara' ) from Homs , Syria