Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Triangular or cylinder-shaped savory or sweet pastry covered with warqa (a paper-thin Moroccan dough) [2] [3] and stuffed with almond paste. [3] Faqqas: Dessert A type of macaroon made with semolina flour. [1] Ghoriba (Ghriyyaba) Dessert Biscuits flavored with aniseed and sesame seeds, or almonds and raisins. [1] Keneffa: Dessert A variety of ...
Qrashel or Krachel (Moroccan Arabic: قراشل) or Lgorss (Moroccan Arabic: لڭرص) are Moroccan traditional sweet sesame rolls, made with anise and fennel. [1] They can be served with tea or coffee, and dipped in cheese, olive oil, jam or honey. The rolls are similar to French brioche, but the anise seeds give them an extra flavor. [2]
Moroccan traditional cookies seller in the old Medina in Marrakech. Usually, seasonal fruits rather than cooked desserts are served at the close of a meal. A common dessert is kaab el ghzal (كعب الغزال, gazelle ankles), a pastry stuffed with almond paste and topped with sugar.
Jawhara (جوهرة), a Moroccan delicacy typical of Fes, with fried waraq pastry, cream, orange blossom water, and toasted almond slices. In the traditional Fassi cuisine, pastilla can also be served as a dessert, in which case, the pastilla is called Jowhara (جوهرة, jewel) or "Pastilla with milk". This pastilla is also made of warka and ...
Moroccan Carrot Salad. This carrot-and-raisin salad gets an upgrade with a slightly spicy, slightly sweet harissa and honey sauce. It brings out the sweet freshness of the carrots and makes the ...
Meskouta is a traditional Moroccan cake usually served for tea time or breakfast. There are different variations of meskouta cakes based on flavors like orange , lemon and vanilla . It was traditionally made in the winter , when oranges ripened.
Seffa (Arabic: السفة) is a Maghrebi term [1] for a dish of sweetened semolina cuscus with butter, cinnamon, and almonds. [2] The dish may incorporate meat, [3] and also alternatively be made with vermicelli or rice.
Sellou [1] (Moroccan Arabic: سلّو səllu), also called slilou or sfouf, is a dessert consumed in Morocco. [2] It is made from a base of roasted flour mixed with butter, honey, almonds, sesame, and possibly other nuts and spices. [3] It is one of the important dishes in Morocco during the holy month of Ramadan. [4] [circular reference]