Authentic Persian Restaurant 

Barg Kabab

Chelo Kabāb -e Barg (چلوکباب برگ) — literally “fillet kebab with rice” — is the aristocrat of Iranian kebabs: paper-thin ribbons of beef or lamb, bathed in saffron-onion marinade, threaded flat onto wide metal skewers, and seared over live coals until rosy and perfumed. Paired with snowy chelo rice, a pat of melting butter, and a blistered tomato, it is the dish Iranians order to mark celebrations, business deals, or simply a payday splurge at the neighborhood chelokabâbi.

Essence & Cultural Role

Where koobideh relies on minced meat, barg showcases whole-muscle tenderness. The meat is sliced with the grain into long sheets, then gently pounded so each “leaf” (barg) is almost translucent. A brief soak in grated-onion juice, saffron water, oil, and a squeeze of lime keeps flavors clean and lets top-quality tenderloin shine. At the table, guests mix sumac into the rice, tear off forkfuls of kebab, and chase each bite with raw onion, mast-o-khiar, or salad-e Shirazi for contrast.

Core Ingredients (4 skewers / 4 servings)

Ingredient Metric US
Beef or lamb tenderloin, silverskin removed 700 g 1 ½ lb
Large onions, grated & juice squeezed 2 2
Brewed saffron (½ tsp ground saffron steeped in 2 Tbsp hot water) 30 ml 2 Tbsp
Neutral oil or melted butter 45 ml 3 Tbsp
Fresh lime juice 15 ml 1 Tbsp
Kosher salt 1 ½ tsp 1 ½ tsp
Freshly ground black pepper ½ tsp ½ tsp
Additional melted butter & saffron drizzle as needed as needed

To serve: 4 cups steamed chelo rice, 4 grilled Roma tomatoes, sumac, pats of butter, raw onion wedges, fresh herbs.

Quick Preparation

  1. Slice & pound Cut tenderloin with the grain into strips ~20 cm (8 in) long, 5 mm (¼ in) thick. Place between plastic and lightly pound to a uniform thinness.

  2. Marinate Combine onion juice (discard pulp), saffron water, oil, lime, salt, and pepper. Coat meat, cover, and refrigerate 2–4 hours (no longer or fibers soften too much).

  3. Skewer Thread each strip accordion-style onto flat, sword-like skewers so it lies broad and flat. Let excess marinade drip.

  4. Grill Prepare a bed of hot charcoal with no flames. Grill 1 ½–2 minutes per side, brushing once with melted butter-saffron mixture; goal is a light char outside and pink succulence inside.

  5. Serve Slide kebabs onto a platter beside mounds of chelo. Top rice with butter and a spoon of saffron-butter. Add grilled tomato, sprinkle sumac, and invite diners to mix at will.

Variations

  • Jūjeh Barg: Substitute chicken breast cutlets; marinate with a spoon of yogurt for added moisture.

  • Royal Veal: Fine-grained veal loin yields an ultra-soft texture prized in classic Tehran restaurants.

  • Rose-Mint Accent: Some northern cooks add a pinch of dried rose and mint to the marinade for a floral lift.

  • Pan-Sear Shortcut: For apartment cooks, sear strips in a cast-iron pan, pressing with a spatula to mimic skewer flatness, then finish in a 200 °C/400 °F oven for 2 minutes.

Pairing Tips

  • Essential sides: mast-o-khiar, salad-e Shirazi, torshi pickles, and chilled doogh (savory yogurt drink).

  • A garnish of barberries (zereshk) sautéed in butter sparkles against the rice for festive tables.

  • Dry red wines with bright acidity (if alcohol is served) or pomegranate juice echo the kebab’s slight citrus tang.

Nutritional Snapshot (per skewer with 1 cup rice)

≈ 520 calories, 38 g protein, 22 g fat (mainly monounsaturated), rich in iron, zinc, and antioxidant saffron compounds.

From street-side grills to wedding banquets, Chelo Kabāb-e Barg embodies Persian culinary elegance: minimal seasoning, masterful technique, and an eye-catching presentation where every saffron-flecked grain and smoky slice invites one more bite.