Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Love cake is made from semolina, cashew nuts, pumpkin preserve, butter, eggs, sugar, and honey flavoured with rose water and a variety of spices, including cinnamon, nutmeg and cardamon, creating a fragrant, sweet, lightly spiced cake with a moist chewy inside and a crunchy exterior. [8]
The cake was introduced by the Portuguese but has evolved into a confectionery unique to Sri Lanka. The original recipe of Bolo Fiado dates back to the 16th century, when the Portuguese controlled the coastal areas of the country. Its name has Portuguese origins, bolo is Portuguese for cake, and folhado meaning a leaf or sheet.
100 kcal (419 kJ) Breudher, also known as Brueder or Bloeder (pronounced as broo-dhuh), is a traditional Sri Lankan Dutch Burgher buttery yeast cake, baked in a fluted mould. [1][2][3] A variation, Bleuda, Kueh Bleuda or Kue Bludder is also found in the Malacca Dutch Eurasian community and in Kochi, a city in the south-west of India. [4]
The most popular dessert among Sri Lankan Muslims during Ramadan. Commonly served at weddings, parties and other special ceremonies. Buffalo curd. Buffalo milk, starter culture. Popular in southern Sri Lanka for weddings, alms, and as a household dessert. Semolina and jaggery pudding. Semolina, jaggery, milk, spices cinnamon, nutmeg, vanilla.
Bibikkan (Sinhala: බිබික්කන්) is a traditional Sri Lankan coconut cake. [1][2] It is a dark moist cake made of shredded coconut, jaggery (from the sap of the toddy palm) and semolina combined with a mixture of spices. [3] Bibikkan is commonly prepared and consumed in celebration of festive and religious occasions, including ...
Grandmother's Pound Cake II. wannabe chefette. This 5-ingredient, tried-and-true pound cake recipe is the real deal: It has one pound each of butter, flour, eggs, and sugar. It makes three full ...
The Poruwa ceremony appears to have existed in Sri Lanka before the introduction of Buddhism in the 3rd century BC. The Poruwa ceremony was a valid custom as a registered marriage until the British introduced the registration of marriages by Law in 1870. Today's Poruwa ceremony has been influenced by both upcountry and low country customs of ...
Media: Kevum. Kevum or Kavum (Sinhala: කැවුම්) is a deep-fried Sri Lankan sweet made from rice flour and kithul (sugar-palm) treacle, with a number of variants adding additional ingredients. It is also known as oil cake. Kevum is traditionally given and consumed during celebrations of Sinhala and Tamil New Year. [1]