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This sweet pastry is made from whey cheese and usually served with mastic flavored traditional Turkish ice cream. It is a local specialty dessert from the coastal town Ayvalık in the Aegean region of Turkey. Macun: Fluid Candy Turkish toffee candy, that is not hard but soft and is stretched over a stick and eaten like a Lollipop. Muhallebi ...
Güllaç (pronounced [ɟylˈlatʃ]) is a Turkish dessert made with milk, rose water, pomegranate and a special kind of pastry. [1] It is consumed especially during Ramadan. [2] Güllaç is considered by some as being the origin of baklava. [3] The similarities between the two desserts are many, such as the use of thin layers of dough.
İzmir Bombası (English: İzmir Bomb), or Praline Stuffed Cookies, [1] is a kurabiye from the Turkish cuisine filled with chocolate spread. [2] The kurabiye gets its name from İzmir, the place where it originates. The desert has a crispy dough layer on the outside and a fluid cream filling on the inside.
Cevizli irmik tatlısı is a Turkish cake made primarily from walnuts and covered in a sweet syrup. [1] [2] [3] There are several variations of the dish, with unique ingredients used in both the syrup and cake. Some common additions include, but are not limited to, orange zest, cloves, brown sugar.
Kabak tatlısı (Turkish for "pumpkin dessert") is a pumpkin dessert in Turkish cuisine. [1] It is made by cooking peeled and cut pumpkin that has had sugar sprinkled on it (candied pumpkin). Milk can also be used. The dish is topped with chopped walnuts with tahini or kaymak. It is a winter-time seasonal dessert. [2] [unreliable source?
Tavukgöğsü (Turkish: tavukgöğsü, [taˈvukɟœːˈsy], "chicken breast") is a Turkish milk pudding made with shredded chicken breast. [1] It was a delicacy served to Ottoman sultans in the Topkapı Palace, and is now a well-known dish in Turkey.
Ayva tatlısı is a dessert from Turkish cuisine that is made with quince. The quince is cooked by boiling in water or in the oven with cloves, sweet syrup and filled with apple or quince meal, and raisins and topped with kaymak. It is served as halves with the inside slightly carved out.
Traditionally, the Cheese dessert of Biga is made using curd (Turkish: teleme), [2] a cheese variety that is particular to the region. The dessert is prepared from unsalted cheese, a dough of flour, egg, water and baking powder. [3]