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Suanmeitang – traditional [10] [11] Chinese beverage made from sour plums (specifically, smoked Chinese plums), [12] rock sugar, and other ingredients such as sweet osmanthus. [ 11 ] Tajine – Maghrebi dish prepared in the earthenware pot of the same name Pages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets
The menu for Henry IV of England's 1403 wedding feast included sugar plums, which were probably fruit preserves or suckets. [4] [page needed]A cookbook from 1609, Delights for Ladies, describes boiling fruits with sugar as “the most kindly way to preserve plums.” [5] The term sugar plum was applied to a wide variety of candied fruits, nuts, and roots by the 16th century.
Chocolate-covered prunes, also known as plums in chocolate or prunes in chocolate (Polish: śliwka w czekoladzie, Russian: чернослив в шоколаде, romanized: chernosliv v shokolade), are a kind of sweet: a chocolate candy with an entire dried plum as a filling. A chocolate-covered prune or plum is a typical Polish delicacy.
The term "palincă" is a generic term for any type of fruit brandy, while "palincă de prune" refers specifically to plum brandy. Țuică is prepared using traditional methods both for private consumption and for sale. Although this was illegal in the past, the government tolerated the practice due to the traditional character of the beverage.
One recipe for "dark red plum jam" (povidl) begins with placing the plums in a fermentation crock along with sugar and cider vinegar, and letting the mixture sit for a day before cooking. [2] Another recipe for "traditional Austrian plum butter" recommends roasting the plums in an oven and then transforming that compote -like dish into jam.
This charm is supposed to rid a person of a wen, which is the Old English word for a cyst or skin blemish. A Journey Charm This charm's purpose is to ask God and other various Biblical figures to protect one on his or her journey. For a Swarm of Bees This charm, also known as The Old English Bee Charm, is meant to protect one from a swarm of bees.
The damson (/ ˈ d æ m z ə n /), damson plum, or damascene [1] (Prunus domestica subsp. insititia, sometimes Prunus insititia), [2] is an edible drupaceous fruit, a subspecies of the plum tree. Varieties of insititia are found across Europe, but the name damson is derived from and most commonly applied to forms that are native to Great ...
It is possible that the bullace is genuinely native to Great Britain: the horticulturalist Harold Taylor, in his book The Plums of England, described it as "the only truly English plum", observing that all other hybrid varieties of plum and damson had at least some non-native origins. [8]