Showing posts with label Debs el Kharoub. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Debs el Kharoub. Show all posts

Saturday, 12 March 2011

Baskot bil Debs (Carob Molasses Biscuits)

Old family recipe, pretty simple, very healthy and not too sweet...


Ingredients:

1 cup Butter
4 cups Flour
1 cup Debs el Kharob (Carob Molasses)
1 tsp Ginger
2 tsp Baking Powder

Rub butter & flour together in hands. Add debs (carob molasses), ginger & baking powder. Make it into soft dough. Divide the mixture in half. Roll each half into a big chunky rope.


 Put in freezer for 10 min till it becomes a sligthly hard as it will be easier to cut. Cut it into 1/2 cm slice.


Each half makes around 20 biscuits. 


 Put on greased or greaseproof paper lined baking tray in hot oven for
 10-15 minutes.


Satein! Bon Appetit!

Wednesday, 9 February 2011

Sfouf Bil Debs ( Carob Molasses Cake)


        Debs el kharoub, or carob molasses, is a thick sweet syrup made by soaking milled carob pods in water and reducing the extracted liquid. In Lebanon, carob molasses was traditionally used as an alternative to sugar.
   
  Sfouf  is a cake a little bit on the dry side ...So easy to make and absolutely wonderful....
Ingredients:
4 cups Flour
1 cup corn oil
1 cup Debs el Karoub (Carob Molasses)
1 tsp Bicarbonate of soda
1 tsp Ground Aniseed
   a bit of water ( if needed)
Sesame Seed  (for decoration optional)
  Preheat oven to gaz mark 5 ( 350F). Mix all ingredients together. Grease the cake tin with butter or it would be very authentic if use tahini instead to coat the baking tray before pouring the mixture. It will give a crunchy crust and deep flavour. Put the mixture into the baking tray.  Smooth the top with wet hands. Sprinkle the sesame seeds on top a very thin layer and bake in medium oven gas mark 5 ( 350F) for approx 20-30 mins Cut into small squares once cooled.



 
     Another typical Lebanese dessert with Debs is Debs bi Tahineh (Tahini and Carob Molasses).  It is a mix tahini (sesame seed paste) with the molasses in a small bowl and you would use pitta bread to dip and eat. Proportion is really up to the individual taste.  Try equal proportion at first and adjust to taste. I love the idea of mixing a sweet syrup with tahini as a dessert.