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  2. How to Make Gulab Jamun, the Indian Dessert Everyone ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/gulab-jamun-indian-dessert...

    Learn how to make gulab jamun, the popular Indian dessert flavored with rose water and cardamom. This gulab jamun recipe is paired with step-by-step photos and tips. The post How to Make Gulab ...

  3. List of Indian sweets and desserts - Wikipedia

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

    Gulab jamun: Fried milk balls soaked in sweet syrup, such as rose syrup or honey. [4] Fried, sugar syrup based Imarti: Sugar syrup, lentil flour. Fried, sugar syrup based Jalebi: Dough fried in a coil shape dipped in sugar syrup, often taken with milk, tea, yogurt, or lassi. [5] Fried, sugar syrup based Kaju katli: Cashews, ghee with cardamom ...

  4. Gulab jamun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gulab_jamun

    Gulab jamun (also spelled gulaab jamun; lit. ' Rose water berry ' or 'Rose berry') is a sweet confectionary or dessert, originating in the Indian subcontinent, and a type of mithai popular in India, Pakistan, Nepal, the Maldives and Bangladesh, as well as Myanmar.

  5. Lyangcha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lyangcha

    The genesis of lyangcha actually goes back to a sweet maker in Burdwan (a district in West Bengal) who used to make Pantua (fried sweetmeat made of flour and milk solids dipped in sugar syrup) of huge sizes. Lyangcha – a sweetmeat in popular parlance – was created by the sweet makers of the region in Bengal.

  6. Syzygium cumini - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syzygium_cumini

    Syzygium cumini, commonly known as Malabar plum, [3] Java plum, [3] black plum, jamun, jaman, jambul, or jambolan, [4] [5] is an evergreen tropical tree in the flowering plant family Myrtaceae, and favored for its fruit, timber, and ornamental value. [5] It is native to the Indian subcontinent and Southeast Asia.

  7. Rasgulla - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rasgulla

    Rasgulla (literally "syrup filled ball") [a] is a syrupy dessert popular in the eastern part of South Asia.It is made from ball-shaped dumplings of chhena dough, cooked in light sugar syrup.

  8. Ledikeni - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ledikeni

    Ledikeni (Bengali: লেডিকেনি) or Lady Kenny is a popular Bangladeshi and Indian sweet consumed in West Bengal, India and Bangladesh.It is a light fried reddish-brown sweet ball made of Chhena and flour, soaked in sugar syrup.

  9. Lokma - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lokma

    The Arabic word luqma (لُقْمَةٌ) (plural luqmāt), means morsel, mouthful, or bite. [5] [6] The dish was known as luqmat al-qādi (لُقْمَةُ ٱلْقَاضِيِ) or "judge's morsels" in 13th-century Arabic cookery books, [2] and the word luqma or loqma by itself has come to refer to it. [5]