Pekmez

Pekmez (Turkish: pekmez) is a molasses-like syrup obtained after condensing juices of fruit must, especially grape by boiling it with a coagulant agent like wood ashes or ground carob seeds.

It is used as a syrup or mixed with tahini for breakfast.

Pekmez
Pekmez (Üzüm Pekmezi), a Turkish syrup made of grapes (grape syrup) or (Keçiboynuzu Pekmezi) of carob

Etymology

Pekmez is etymologically Oghuz Turkic in origin and it was called bekmes in the past. The oldest written account of the word is recorded in 1073 dictionary Dīwān Lughāt al-Turk by Mahmud al-Kashgari.

History

Fruit molasses, defrutum, goes back to the classical period.

During the Byzantine era, the region of Trapezus (modern Trebizond) grew mulberry trees for silkworms. Local Armenians used mulberries to make a sweet syrup called petmez or pekmez; the Greeks made grape syrup, siraios (σιραίος). After the Byzantine Empire fell, the term petmez replaced the Greek names for grape syrup in Greek, in the form petimezi.[citation needed]

Regional variants

In Turkey, sugar beet (şeker pancarı), figs (incir) or mulberry (dut) are often used, as well as juniper berries (andiz). Pekmez made from carob (keçiboynuz or harnup) is popularly recommended as a treatment for iron deficiency anemia. In Azerbaijan, pekmez is made mostly from mulberry, grape, rosehip (doshab) or pomegranates(narsharab).

In the Balkans, it is more jam-like in texture and usually made of plums. It usually contains more fruit products and less sugar than jam. In Greece, it is called petimezi (πετιμέζι).

In Arab cuisine, dibs or dibis (in some regions called "robb" or "rubb") is made from pomegranates, grapes, carob, or dates.

See also

References

Further reading

  • Pekmez  Media related to Pekmez at Wiki Commons


This article uses material from the Wikipedia English article Pekmez, which is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 license ("CC BY-SA 3.0"); additional terms may apply (view authors). Content is available under CC BY-SA 4.0 unless otherwise noted. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.
®Wikipedia is a registered trademark of the Wiki Foundation, Inc. Wiki English (DUHOCTRUNGQUOC.VN) is an independent company and has no affiliation with Wiki Foundation.

Tags:

Pekmez EtymologyPekmez HistoryPekmez Regional variantsPekmez Further readingPekmezFlocculationGrapeMolassesMustTahiniTurkish language

🔥 Trending searches on Wiki English:

Billboard Hot 100RihannaKu Klux KlanXXX (2002 film)Charlie Sheen2020 United States presidential electionUnited StatesBlack holeMadison BeerBillboard (magazine)Fahadh FaasilCeltics–Heat rivalryWilliam ShakespeareJayson TatumCrackhead BarneyBruno FernandesAl PacinoVoice of VietnamMillennialsAnna SawaiPoor Things (film)Anzac DayGAZ SobolJoseph StalinGervonta DavisVarshangalkku SheshamRebel MoonThe Talented Mr. Ripley (film)MalaysiaRishi SunakTyler HerroKung Fu Panda 4List of Young Sheldon episodesList of most-streamed artists on SpotifyThe Watchers (film)World War IIBrooklynSacha Baron CohenCaliforniaXVideosAll I Want for Christmas Is YouList of NBA championsPornhubQueen of TearsFallout 4Scott PorterFIFA World CupSupreme Court of the United StatesLinkedInUSS Triton (SSRN-586)Salman RushdieRyan GarciaWindows 10 version historyTom Goodman-HillAlgebraic notation (chess)Indonesia national under-23 football teamAlbert EinsteinRichard Williams (tennis coach)Lana Del ReyErling HaalandList of countries by GDP (nominal) per capitaJude BellinghamMaidaanInna Lillahi wa inna ilayhi raji'unCatholic Church sexual abuse casesFrank SinatraAnya Taylor-JoyRobert KraftBiggest ball of twineAngelina JolieDuran DuranNicole Brown SimpsonCold WarNimrod (comics)ChinaKevin De Bruyne🡆 More