Kolompeh (Persian: کلمپه) is an Iranian pastry baked in the city of Kerman.[1][2] Kolompeh looks like a pie with a mixture of minced dates with cardamom powder and other flavoring inside. Dates, wheat flour, walnuts and cooking oil are the main ingredients.[3] Pistachios or sesame powder are often used for decorating kolompeh.
Type | Pastry |
---|---|
Place of origin | Iran |
Region or state | Kerman |
History
editKolompeh traditionally was baked by Kermani women using local oils, dates from Kerman date palms, Persian walnuts, local cardamom, sesame, and local wheat flour. Industrially produced kolompeh has now become one of the main Kerman souvenirs.[4] It is manufactured using a variety of formats with a variety of nuts.
Variants
editA Turkish variant of this pastry called kolumpe kurabiyesi is made of wheat flour, dates, walnuts, almonds, pistachios, and vegetable oil.
References
edit- ^ "Sweet Kerman - Iranian.com". iranian.com. Retrieved 12 July 2015.
- ^ Rajendram, Rajkumar; Preedy, Victor R.; Patel, Vinood B., eds. (August 25, 2023). Ancient and Traditional Foods, Plants, Herbs and Spices Used in the Middle East. CRC Press. ISBN 9781000902709.
- ^ "Kolompeh, a flaky and sweet date filled pastry from Kerman - Persian / Iranian Pastries - Pinterest". Pinterest. 26 August 2013. Retrieved 12 July 2015.
- ^ "Kerman's appealing souvenirs". irna.ir. Retrieved 12 July 2015.
Kerman's other souvenirs include cookies such as kolompeh, qottab, komaj and date bread, as well as spices.
See also
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