In Moroccan cuisine, Ahriche (ⴰⵃⵔⵉⵛ) is a dish eaten by the tribes of Zayanes and Khénifra. The name is derived from the Berber word for stick; this is in reference to the dish's manner of cooking. It is a dish of tripe usually consisting of ganglion, caul, lung or heart of an animal wound with intestines on a stick of oak and cooked on hot coals.

Ahriche
Place of originMorocco
Region or stateZayanes and Khénifra
Main ingredientsTripe
Ingredients generally usedGanglion, caul, lung or heart

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