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This is a list of Pakistani sweets and desserts. Many different desserts exist in Pakistani cuisine. [1] [2] Some sweets originate and have been adopted from India due to the two countries' shared cultural heritage. Please see the List of Indian sweets and desserts for more details.
Pakistani confectionery (5 P) Pages in category "Pakistani desserts" The following 20 pages are in this category, out of 20 total.
Lab-e-Shireen (Urdu: لبِ شیرین) is a traditional Pakistani custard-like dessert. It is often served during the month of Ramadan or during the days of Eid. It is served topped with vermicelli, cream, jelly, and fresh and dried fruits. Lab-e-Shireen is one of the most popular desserts in the modern cooking of Pakistan. [1]
Sweet rice cooked with jaggery, known as gurr ala bhat or gurr walay chaawal, is a common household dessert. Zarda rice are also common for special occasion and festivals. Other Pakistani desserts and sweets such as siwayyan, gulab jaman, barfi, firni, kheer, and Ras malai are also popular.
Ras malai, also known as rasamalei, or roshmalai, is a dessert that originated in the Bengal region of Indian subcontinent. [1] The dessert is called roshmalai in Bengali, [2] ras malai in Hindi, [3] and rasa malei in Odia. [4] It is popular in India, Bangladesh and Pakistan. [5]
Barfi [a] or burfi is a milk-based sweet from the Indian subcontinent with a fudge-like consistency.Its name comes from the Persian and Urdu word (barf) for snow. Barfi is consumed throughout India and Pakistan and is especially popular in North India.
Sohan halwa (Urdu سوہن حلوہ; [ˈsoːɦən ˈɦəlʋaː]) is a traditional Mughlai [1] dessert from Punjab, popular in the Indian subcontinent, which is a variety of dense, sweet confection or halwa. Gheewala halwa is popular for sohan halwa since the Mughal era. Punjabi sohan halwa
Malpua, or sometimes shortened to pua, is a sweetened breakfast served with morning tea or as a snack with evening tea or as a dessert originating from the East Indian subcontinent, popular in Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Nepal, and Pakistan. [1]