"Bamiyeh" redirects here. For the dish featuring okra, see
Bamia .
Dessert common to Iran and the former countries of the Ottoman Empire
Tulumba Tulumba
Alternative names balah ash-sham (Arabic: بلح الشام) Type Dessert Place of origin Egypt , Ottoman Empire Region or state Egypt, Countries of the former Ottoman Empire, Balkans , Middle East , South Caucasus Main ingredients Flour , butter , salt , water , syrup , vanilla extract
Tulumba or Bamiyeh (Persian : بامیه ; Arabic : بلح الشام ) is a deep-fried dessert found in Egypt, Turkey and the regional cuisines of the former Ottoman Empire . It is a fried batter soaked in syrup, similar to jalebis or churros . It is made from unleavened choux pastry dough (usually about 3 cm long) piped with a pastry bag using an open star or similar tip. It is first deep-fried to golden colour and then sugar-sweet syrup is poured over it when still hot. It is eaten cold.
Name
Tulumba literally means 'pump' in Turkish, deriving from the Italian tromba . The dessert is called pomba in Cypriot Greek and bombacık in Cypriot Turkish . In Armenian cuisine it may be called either pomp or tulumba (Armenian : թուլումբա). Tulumba features in Albanian , Serbian , Bosnian , Bulgarian , Macedonian , Greek (Greek : τουλούμπα ), Azeri (Azerbaijani : Ballıbadı ) and Turkish cuisines. The sweet is also found in Persian cuisine as bamiyeh (Persian : باميه ), after the vegetable of the same Persian name (okra ), due to its shape. In Hejazi it is called ṭurumba (Arabic : طُرُمْبَة ) directly from Italian : tromba , but in Egyptian and some Arab cuisines it is called balaḥ ash-Shām (Arabic : بلح الشام ), literally "Syrian dates " or "Damascene dates," though the name may have come from "şambali ", another Turkish dessert (the "Şam" in "şambali" corresponding to "Shām" in "balaḥ ash-Shām" and both referring to Damascus). In Iraqi cuisine it is known as datli (Arabic : داطلي ), directly coming from Turkish word tatlı .
Main ingredients
It is made from a yogurt [citation needed ] and starch based dough, which is fried before being dipped in syrup . It is a special sweet often enjoyed at Iftar in Ramadan .[ 1] It is also commonly sold alongside jalebi , which is prepared in a similar way, but arranged in a web-like arrangement of strips of dough.
Gallery
Tulumba
Tulumba with kaymak and pistachio
Tulumba cross-section (front)
Round
Spiral shape
Two pieces of shape (Twisted round).
See also
References
External links
Media related to Tulumba at Wikimedia Commons
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