Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Qishta Ashta (qishta) topped with pistachios and honey, as served at Phoenicia Restaurant in Glendale, California (2024). Qishta (Arabic: قِشْطَة, romanized: qišṭa, pronounced), also known as kishta, kashta , ghishta, or ashta, is a dairy coagulated milk product prepared from heated fresh milk and consumed as a dessert.
Tips for Making Lebanese Desserts. Use natural sweeteners.Instead of processed sugar, choose sweeteners like honey, date syrup, or even whole dates.
A dish of booza topped with pistachios served at the Bakdash ice cream shop in Damascus. Booza (Arabic: بُوظَة, romanized: Būẓah, lit. 'ice cream') is a frozen dairy dessert originally from the Levant made with milk, cream, sugar, mastic and sahlab (orchid flour), giving it its distinguished stretchy and chewy texture—much like dondurma.
Lebanese cuisine is the culinary traditions and practices originating from Lebanon. It includes an abundance of whole grains , fruits , vegetables , fresh fish and seafood . Poultry is eaten more often than red meat , and when red meat is eaten, it is usually lamb and goat meat .
Find special occasion recipes for fancy appetizers, steak dinners, decadent desserts, and more. These are perfect for holidays, parties, and romantic dinners!
Kaymak, sarshir, or qashta/ashta (Persian: سَرشیر saršir; Arabic: قشطة qeshta or قيمر geymar; Turkish: Kaymak) is a creamy dairy food similar to clotted cream, made from the milk of water buffalo, cows, sheep, or goats in Central Asia, some Balkan countries, some Caucasus countries, the Levant, Turkic regions, Iran and Iraq.
Salep, also spelled sahlep or sahlab, [note 1] is a flour made from the tubers of the orchid genus Orchis (including species Orchis mascula and Orchis militaris).These tubers contain a nutritious, starchy polysaccharide called glucomannan.
The Arabic word luqma (لُقْمَةٌ) (plural luqmāt), means morsel, mouthful, or bite. [5] [6] The dish was known as luqmat al-qādi (لُقْمَةُ ٱلْقَاضِيِ) or "judge's morsels" in 13th-century Arabic cookery books, [2] and the word luqma or loqma by itself has come to refer to it. [5]