back to main page



 
 
The Celestial Mountains Tour Company
Kievskaya 131 - 2 , Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan , (996 312) tel 21-25-62; fax 61-04-02
Email: celest@infotel.kg

GENERAL

Water — In Bishkek the tap water is generally safe to drink, but if you have a delicate stomach, or are concerned then boil the water. Bottled mineral water is available throughout the country but tends to be carbonated and a little salty, and can be an acquired taste.

Bread — In Bishkek there is a wide range of breads available. Outside the cities, the flat, round lepyosha is found almost everywhere. Fresh, warm, straight from the tandoor (a clay oven) it is particularly pleasant. At meals it is usually broken, not cut with a knife and never placed on the table upside down.

Meat — The most common form of meat is used in Kyrgyz cuisine is mutton. Sheep have a high place in Kyrgyz culture and the Kyrgyz use every part of the animal for something. Sheep meat tends to be more fatty than that from other animals, and so it should be no surprise that fatty meat is often considered to be the best. (There is even a Kyrgyz saying — «Cheap mutton has little fat»). In some households and festivals the Sheep«s head, (the eyes in particular), may be offered to an honoured guest. Horsemeat is also highly revered and for special occasions and funerals it is common for a horse to be slaughtered and the cooked and presented to guests. Only young mares are used which have been fed on Alpine grasses, which are thought to give the meat a particularly good flavour. A great favourite in the countryside, (but also available in Bishkek) is chuchuk — a sort of sausage made from horsemeat. Beef is also found, but less often. Chicken is rarely used by the Kyrgyz — chickens being found among settled peoples rather than nomads. Pork is not used by the Kyrgyz, but can be found in Chinese and Russian restaurants.

Fish — Fresh fish are caught in the lakes such as Son-Kul and Issyk Kul. Popular are the dried and smoked fish that are sold by the roadside near Issyk-Kul.

Fruit and Vegetables — most of the produce is grown locally and seasonal and there is a wide variety — although recently more exotic fruits and vegetables are imported and available in the markets. You can encounter fresh produce, cooked, dried and preserved (jams/pickles etc.) Nuts are also very popular.

Honey is very popular — and in the mountains the traveller can come across a solitary trailer, or a cluster of five or six gathered together, packed with and surrounded by beehives. The owner will happily sell a litre of fresh mountain honey (but you should have your own container if possible).

on top