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Double ka meetha is an Indian bread pudding sweet made of fried bread slices soaked in hot milk with spices, including saffron and cardamom. [1] Double ka meetha is a dessert of Hyderabad. [2]
Shahi Tukra is type of bread pudding which originated in South Asia during the Mughal era in the 1600s. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] The literal translation of Shahi Tukra is royal piece or bite. [ 1 ] Shahi tukre originated in the Mughal Empire when Indian chefs made this dish to present to royal Mughal courts. [ 3 ]
Those include mammol, ghorabya or qurabiya, kahk, baklava, betitfour, barfi, cakes, cookies, kanafeh, halva and marzipan. In South Asia, sheer kurma barfi, halwa, kheer, and Shahi tukda are most common dishes during Eid. Chomchoms, barfis, gulabjamuns and different types of pithas as well as roshmalai are popular. These are not only consumed ...
Mughlai cuisine consists of dishes developed or popularised in the early-modern Indo-Persian cultural centres of the Mughal Empire.It represents a combination of cuisine of the Indian subcontinent with the cooking styles and recipes of Central Asian and Islamic cuisine.
Bread pudding originated with 11th-century English cooks who repurposed leftover stale bread. In the following centuries, the dish became known as "poor man's pudding" because of the scarcity of food at the time, with the pudding being made only with boiling water, sugar, and spices.
Sheer khurma or sheer khorma (Persian: شير خرما, romanized: shîr xormâ "milk and dates") [1] is a festival vermicelli pudding prepared by Muslims on Eid ul-Fitr [2] [3] and Eid al-Adha in Pakistan, Afghanistan, and parts of Central Asia.
Cakes shaped like breasts to honor Saint Agatha of Sicily. Made of sponge, moistened with juice or liqueur, and stuffed with ricotta and chocolate. Decorated with marzipan, icing, and candied fruit. Cassava cake: Philippines: A traditional Filipino moist cake made from grated cassava, coconut milk, and condensed milk with a custard layer on top.
Awadhi cuisine (Hindi: अवधी पाक-शैली, Urdu: اودھی کھانے) is a cuisine native to the Awadh region in Northern India and Southern Nepal. [1] The cooking patterns of Lucknow are similar to those of Central Asia, the Middle East, and Northern India and Western India with the cuisine comprising both vegetarian and non-vegetarian dishes.