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Keşkül

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Turkish milk and almond pudding
Keşkül
Keşkül with cracked walnuts on it.
TypePudding
Place of originTurkey
Main ingredientsAlmonds, milk

Keşkül (Turkish: keşkül) is an almond-based milk pudding from Turkish cuisine. Usually served in a bowl and eaten with a spoon, it is often garnished with coconut shaving or pistachio nuts and is off-white in colour.

Etymology

The dish's name is derived from the Ottoman Turkish idiomatic expression "keşkül-i fukara" meaning "beggar's bowl". The word keşkül and its respective idiom is ultimately traced back to Persian kaşkūl (كشكول), meaning "beggar" or "beggar's bowl". The oldest written usage of the word in a Turkic language is traced backed to Franciscus a Mesgnien Meninski's Thesaurus. According to Meninski the word originally meant poculum or scyphus. The usage of the word to indicate the dessert is first attested in Şemseddin Sami's 1900 work Kamûs-ı Türkî [tr].

See also

Muhallebi

References

  1. Başan, Ghillie; Başan, Jonathan (1997). Classic Turkish Cookery. Tauris Parke Books. p. 191. ISBN 978-1-86064-011-7.
  2. "keşkül". Nişanyan Sözlük. Retrieved 2020-10-21.
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