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Maamoul at Vienna Naschmarkt. 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
Date-filled kahk are believed to be the origin of maamoul, a similar Eid biscuit eaten in the Levant. [3] This dish also popular in Indonesia and called as kue kaak as result of acculturation between Arabs and Indonesian. Usually served during Mawlid or Eid ul-Fitr. [4] Kaak is an important part of Egyptian and Sudanese culture.
Basbousa bil ashta: a Levantine variation of basbousa filled with milk cream in the middle. Vegan Basbousa: Basbusa is also available in vegan form using apple sauce to bind the base mix together instead of dairy and eggs. Basbousa eem Tapuzim: Israeli variation from the coastal region, it is flavored with orange juice.
The Armed Forces Recipe Service is a compendium of high-volume foodservice recipes written and updated regularly by the United States Department of Defense Natick Laboratories and used by military cooks and by institutional and catering operations. It originated in 1969 as a consolidation of the cooking manuals of the four main services and is ...
Boyoz pastry, a regional specialty of İzmir, Turkey introduced to Ottoman cuisine by the Sephardim [1]. Sephardic Jewish cuisine, belonging to the Sephardic Jews—descendants of the Jewish population of the Iberian Peninsula until their expulsion in 1492—encompassing traditional dishes developed as they resettled in the Ottoman Empire, North Africa, and the Mediterranean, including Jewish ...
The traditional stuffing of Qatayef, as evident in a number of Medieval Arabic cookbooks, is crushed almond and sugar. In these recipes, once the pancake was stuffed, it would sometimes be fried in walnut oil or baked in the oven. [8] Qatayef was traditionally prepared by street vendors as well as households in Egypt and the Levant.
Śaṅkha Auspicious symbol – conch Rewalsar. The right-turning white conch shell (Sanskrit: śaṅkha; Tibetan: དུང་དཀར་གཡས་འཁྱིལ་, THL: dungkar yénkhyil) represents the beautiful, deep, melodious, interpenetrating and pervasive sound of the dharma, which awakens disciples from the deep slumber of ignorance and urges them to accomplish their own welfare ...
He was famously known by the British Empire as the ''Mad Mullah". [3] In 1917, the Ottoman Empire referred him as the " Emir of the Somali People ". [ 4 ] Due to his successful completion of the Hajj to Mecca , his complete memorization of the Quran and his purported descent from the Islamic prophet Muhammad , his name is sometimes preluded ...