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The creamy pudding is made from semolina, milk, sugar, and a touch of orange blossom water and topped with ashta and crushed nuts for a decadent Lebanese pistachio dessert. Lebanese Rice Pudding ...
Traditional Arabic Sweets and Desserts. Arabic cuisine has offers so many decadent, delightfully scrumptious desserts made with ingredients like flaky phyllo dough, pistachios, dates, honey, rose ...
A dish of booza topped with pistachios served at the Bakdash ice cream shop in Damascus. Booza (Arabic: بُوظَة, romanized: Būẓah, lit. 'ice cream') is a frozen dairy dessert originally from the Levant made with milk, cream, sugar, mastic and sahlab (orchid flour), giving it its distinguished stretchy and chewy texture—much like dondurma.
The candy bar is inspired by knafeh: a Middle Eastern dessert made with kataifi (a shredded phyllo pastry), attar (a sweet, sugary syrup) and then layers of cheese, pistachio, cream or other fillings.
Ma'amoul (Arabic: معمول maʿmūl [mæʕˈmuːl]) is a filled butter cookie made with semolina flour. It is popular throughout the Arab world. The filling can be made with dried fruits like figs, dates, or nuts such as pistachios or walnuts, and occasionally almonds. [1
Qatayef is the general name of the dessert as a whole and, more specifically, the batter. It is usually made out of flour, baking powder, water, yeast, and sometimes sugar. The result of the batter being poured onto a round hot plate appears similar to pancakes, except only one side is cooked, then stuffed and folded. The pastry is filled with ...
Basbousa is the most common name for this dessert in the Middle East but it may be named differently depending on the region; it is often called "hareesa" in the Levant. Note that "harissa" in North Africa is a spicy red sauce. It is a popular dessert offered in many sweets bakeries in the Middle East and especially popular during Ramadan.
However, it does feature a chapter on qatayif, an Arabic pancake dumpling dessert that originated in the Fatamid Empire. [ 22 ] [ 4 ] The 13th century anonymous cookbook, Kitab al tabikh fi-l-Maghrib wa-l-Andalus ( Book of Dishes from Maghreb and Al-Andalus ), however, gives a number of recipes for knafeh, which it describes as a pancake ...