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  2. List of Indian sweets and desserts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Indian_sweets_and...

    Ingredients and preferred types of dessert vary by region. In the eastern part of India, for example, most are based on milk products. Many are flavoured with almonds and pistachios, spiced with cardamon, nutmeg, cloves and black pepper, and decorated with nuts, or with gold or silver leaf. [1]

  3. List of desserts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_desserts

    Indian confectionery desserts (known as mithai, or sweets in some parts of India). Sugar and desserts have a long history in India: by about 500 BC, people in India had developed the technology to produce sugar crystals. In the local language, these crystals were called khanda (खण्ड), which is the source of the word candy. [1]

  4. Sweets from the Indian subcontinent - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sweets_from_the_Indian...

    Assortment of Indian sweets. Ancient Sanskrit literature from India mention feasts and offerings of mithas (sweet). Rigveda mentions a sweet cake made of barley called apūpa, where barley flour was either fried in ghee or boiled in water, and then dipped in honey. Malpua preserves both the name and the essentials of this preparation. [15]

  5. List of snack foods from the Indian subcontinent - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_snack_foods_from...

    A sweet dish commonly made in South India. The sweet dish is made with semolina, sugar & ghee. Since a pinch of Saffron(kesari) is added to give the sweet dish an orange color, the sweet dish is names as 'Kesari' Khakhra: a popular vegetarian roasted Gujarati Indian thin cracker bread or snack item made from mat bean and wheat flour and oil. Khaman

  6. Lyangcha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lyangcha

    Starting from 10 rupees to a hundred rupees each for the largest sized one (about 3 feet), these sweets are the second most attractive elements after the temples. The most famous region of Lyangcha is Shaktigarh, the birthplace of the sweet itself. There are many shops selling those sweets along NH 19. [5]

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  8. Kheer (Bengali sweets) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kheer_(Bengali_sweets)

    Kheer or Meoa (Bengali: ক্ষীর) is a sweet from the Bengal region of the Indian subcontinent. [1] It is not only a sweet by itself, but it is also used as the main ingredient of many other sweets. In North India, Kheer (Payesam) is a type of rice pudding.

  9. Ghantewala - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ghantewala

    Sohan Halwa (top shelf) and other traditional Indian sweets at Ghantewala in Chandni Chowk Emperor Shah Alam II, (r. 1759 - 1806) during whose rule the shop was established and got its name It was founded by Lala Sukh Lal Jain who had arrived in the walled city of Delhi from Amber, India , a few years after Sindhia restored Mughal Emperor Shah ...