Murabba

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Murabba
Shaftali murebbesi hazir e-citizen.jpg
Peach murabba
Origin
Region or state Caucasus, West Asia, Central Asia, South Asia
Details
Course served Dessert
Main ingredient(s) fruits or berries, sugar

Murabba[1] (from Arabic: مربة‎‎, mirabba "jam", "fruit preserves"; Armenian: մուրաբա, muraba, Azerbaijani: mürəbbə, Georgian: მურაბა, muraba, Hindi: मुरब्बा, murabbā, Persian: مربا‎‎, morrabâ, Tajik: мураббо, murabbo, Urdu: مربا‎, Uzbek: 'murabbo') refers to sweet fruit preserve which is popular in many regions of Caucasus, Central and South Asia. It is traditionally prepared with fruits, sugar, and spices.

Fruit murabba

A popular fruit that is candied is apple, apricot, gooseberry (amla), mango, plum, quince which can be preserved for long periods both as a wet murabba and a dry version, and is said to have medicinal properties.[2] It is widely used in Indian traditional and folk medicine.

Allam murabba

Allam murabba (Ginger brittle)

Allam Murabba (ginger brittle) is made from ginger, sugar etc. It is cooked and cut into round pieces. Allam in Telugu language is ginger, hence the name.

In Caucasus

Murraba in Caucasus is made of strawberries, cherries and local fruits. When the Georgians travelled to India, they adapted the recipe to use the local mango, which became a traditional favorite of the Gujaratis over the years.[citation needed] Georgians make murraba once a season and fill their pantries with bottled murraba.

Similar products

Similar confections are also made in Eastern Europe (Belarus, Russia, and Ukraine), where they are called varenye.

References


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