ohh..now i got it...i must buy this from the shop..ohh :-[
Thank you:statisfie
Is this thread legal? I gained 27 pounds reading it.
Thank you for all the nice recipes. My daughter is going to be mad tho, cause I printed them for her to fix for me.
I like to try various foods from around the world. To share here is an American Indian Dessert. My wife was Cherokee Indian and much of her cooking was native American foods.
This is a Traditional Cherokee deessert
Pumpkin and Corn Dessert
1 small pumpkin
2 ears corn, cut from cob
1/2 cup whole wheat flour
Sugar or honey
Peel, seed and slice pumpkin. Cover with water and simmer until tender.
Place corn kernels in pie tin in 350-degree oven; bake for 15 minutes.
Add corn to pumpkin. Add flour, stirring constantly over low heat until mixture thickens. Add sugar or honey to taste. Serve hot.
Hmmmmmm....Masha'allah I have been reading your thread regularly sis.......and I saw a few recipes which looked interesting, particularly the tiramisu.
I really love baking Masha'allah, and every month I buy 3 different magazines to keep up with the recipes :statisfie
But these days I'm trying to do everything from scratch, like I quite buying graham cracker crusts and I start making my own graham crackers.
And also I'm trying to dig up any old long lost and forgotten 'traditional' recipes......like I'm trying out old Malaysian deserts and stuff that aren't that common anymore.......
I just love baking :wub:
Cherokee Grape Dumplings
* 2 quarts ripe, seeded grapes
* 3 cups water
* 2 1/2 cups sugar
* 2 tsp. baking powder
* 2 tbsp. melted shortening
* 2 tbsp flour
* salt to taste
Boil grapes in 2 cups water over medium heat, use a heavy pot. When mixture boils, stir in sugar. In a bowl mix 1 cup water, shortening, salt and baking powder with flour. Dumplings may be formed with floured hands and dropped into the boiling juice mixture. Cover the mixture, let the dumplings boil for a few minutes, then set without heat for 5 - 10 minutes.
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Grape Dumplings, Updated
* 1 cup flour
* 1 1/2 tsp baking powder
* 2 tsp sugar
* 1/4 tsp salt
* 1 tbsp shortening
* 1/2 cup grape juice
Mix flour, baking powder, sugar, salt and shortening. Add juice and mix into stiff dough. Roll dough very thin on floured board and cut into strips ½" wide (or roll dough in hands and break off pea-sized bits). Drop into boiling grape juice and cook for 10 - 12 minutes.
Some Cherokee cooks continue to make their grape dumplings by gathering and cooking wild grapes, or 'possum grapes' instead of grape juice.
The John Howard Payne Papers, a document from 1835 where the elders were interviewed for their knowledge of the old ways, tells us that around 1800, a grape dessert was made from boiling the grapes and mashing them and then adding corn meal to make a thick consistency. This seems to be the origin of what has been enjoyed for the last one hundred years or so as "Grape Dumplings."
To me this is very similar in taste to the Pakistani Gulabjamun
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I do not attempt to be funny, but the recipes you have provided, are they fattening?
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does anyone know how to make this? i dont what it's called, its small sweet pastry with chopped pistachio nuts, i think the recipe is arab or north african.
thats the most information i can give about it i'm afraid.
does anyone know how to make this? i dont what it's called, its small sweet pastry with chopped pistachio nuts, i think the recipe is arab or north african.
thats the most information i can give about it i'm afraid.
does anyone know how to make this? i dont what it's called, its small sweet pastry with chopped pistachio nuts, i think the recipe is arab or north african.
thats the most information i can give about it i'm afraid.
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