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Eight-flavor syrup dispenser including grape syrup Jallab syrup made from carob, dates, grape molasses and rose water; used to make jallab tea Churchkhela, a snack made from nuts (walnuts or hazelnuts, usually) dipped in grape syrup. Grape syrup is a condiment made with concentrated grape juice. It is thick and sweet because of its high ratio ...
Pekmez (Üzüm Pekmezi), a Turkish syrup made of grapes (grape syrup) or (Keçiboynuzu Pekmezi) of carobPekmez (Turkish: pekmez; Azerbaijani: bəkməz/doşab) is a molasses-like syrup obtained after condensing juices of fruit must, especially grape, by boiling it with a coagulant agent like wood ashes or ground carob seeds.
in Greek cuisine, petimezi; in Indian cuisine, drakshasava; in Ottoman cuisine, pekmez; in Persian cuisine, Dooshab; in Ancient Roman cuisine, defrutum, carenum, and sapa. Some foods are made using fruit syrups or molasses: Churchkhela, a sausage-shaped candy made from grape must and nuts
Currently, reduced must is used in Greek, other Balkan countries, French and Middle Eastern cookery as a syrup known as petimezi, pekmez or dibis. In Greece, petimezi is a basic ingredient for a must-custard known as moustalevria , and a sweet-meal known as soutzoukos , churchkhela .
Molasses – a thick, sweet syrup made from boiling sugar cane. Orgeat syrup – a sweet syrup made from almonds, sugar, and rose water or orange flower water; Oleo saccharum – A syrup made from the oil of citrus peels. Palm syrup – an edible sweet syrup produced from the sap of a number of palms, it is produced in the Canary Islands and ...
[citation needed] Georgians usually make churchkhela in autumn when the primary ingredients, grapes and nuts, are harvested. It is a string of walnut halves that have been dipped in grape juice called tatara or phelamushi (grape juice thickened with flour), and dried in the sun. [27] No sugar is added to make real churchkhela. Instead of ...
Jallab or Jellab (Arabic: جلاب, romanized: jallāb) is a type of fruit syrup popular in the Middle East made from carob, dates, grape molasses, and rose water. [1] Jallab is very popular in Palestine, Syria, Jordan, Lebanon and Egypt. It is made mainly of grape molasses, grenadine syrup, and rose water, then smoked with Arabic incense.
In order to produce moustalevria, grape must (the juice from pressed grapes before fermentation) is boiled in low fire. Then a small amount of argil is added in order to clean the must. [4] [7] After the boil, ingredients like flour, sugar, semolina, petimezi, sesame, vanilla, almonds, walnuts, etc. are included.