Spiced Samak Majboos is an awe-inspiring dish that is deeply embedded in the cultural fabric of the Gulf region, particularly in Kuwait and Bahrain. As one of the best-loved communal plates, Majboos (or Machboos/Makbous) is often reserved for big celebrations, family gatherings, and feasts—the kind that call for golden platters, generous scoops, and the sweet heat of communal conversation.
Traditionally made with lamb or chicken, the Samak (fish) Majboos adapts those same core Gulf flavors to the fresh catch from warm Arabian waters. It bursts with the region’s signature bouquet of toasted spices and the earthy hint of dried limes (loomi). With rice as its trusted companion, the Majboos rice is delicate: every grain fluffy and suffused with spiced, spiked broths, speckled with aromatic onions, sweet with tomatoes, and lush with a finishing touch of saffron.
Rice-based dishes in the Gulf share a kinship with Persian and Indian pilafs as well as Levant-style spiced rices, reflecting centuries of trade across the Indian Ocean. The use of loomi—dried black limes—is especially characteristic of Kuwaiti cooking, infusing a gentle citrus musk that enhances seafood and balances the robust warmth of Majboos spice. The spice blend, heavily aromatic with cardamom, cinnamon, and coriander, likely arrived at Kuwaiti tables bundled in the linen sacks of early trade caravans.
The cultural significance of Samak Majboos comes from its place on the Friday lunch table or during holidays. Cooking it is an act of celebration—layers of flavor, a beautiful pass around the table, each helping a gesture of hospitality. There’s storytelling in its saffron-hued grains and comfort in the esteemed place of fish, considered a dietary staple along Kuwait’s historic seafaring coast.
There’s something uniquely riveting about piercing whole dried limes and nestling them into rice, knowing they will collapse into bottlenecks of tangy depth. And while many consider lamb Major’s stronghold, a well-cooked Samak Majboos is gently majestic—the flesh flaking tenderly where heat has seeped through the seasoned skin, harmonizing with herby, perfumed stalks of rice.
Don’t skip the saffron and the final medley of toasted almonds and soaked raisins (if you’re adventurous)—they lend a sweet crunch and brightness that complements the dish in color and palate. Serve wedges of fresh lemon on the side for a burst of acid and a reminder of Samak Majboos’s maritime roots.
If dried loomi is unavailable, you can use a few strips of lemon zest and a bay leaf; if Majboos spice isn’t pre-blended, substitute a mix of ground cumin, coriander, black pepper, and a whisper each of nutmeg and cinnamon.
Making Spiced Samak Majboos is a sensory affair: the waft of crackling spices, searing fish hissing in oil, steam fogging golden from saffron, and that unique citrus tang. As family arrives to share, there’s a boisterous sense of festivity that embodies the spirit of Gulf cuisine—generous, heady, and deeply comforting.
No single bite tastes the same, with every fork uncovering a symphony: fragrant onions, bright lemon, plush fish, and vivid rice. Try this at your next dinner party or a weekend gathering; serve with a simple cucumber-yogurt salad or khubz (Arabic flatbread), and let your guests embark on a journey to the Arabian shore.