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Assidat Zgougou

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Assidat Zgougou
An Assidat Zgougou cup
CourseDessert
Place of origin Tunisia
Region or stateTunisia
Main ingredientsGrains of Aleppo pine

Assidat Zgougou (Tunisian Arabic: عصيدة الزقوقو, /ʕsˁiːdət (ɪ̈z)zɡuːɡuː/), literally pine nut porridge/cream, is a Tunisian dessert[1] often prepared to celebrate the Mūled. It was originally made out of Aleppo pine, Flour, milk, cream and, nuts. That one variant of the dish is now known as "εasida Tunisia" or Tunisian cream/porridge.

Preparation

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The lower layer is made of the grains (pine nut seeds) of Aleppo pines,[2] "zgougou", not to be confused with pine nuts of stone pines or pinus armandii. The grains are cleaned, then ground in water, and sieved to very small sizes. The resulting juicy substance is then mixed with wheat flour and/or starch depending on the recipe. Sometimes concentrated milk is added. Then everything is cooked at low heat while stirred. Powdered sugar is added gradually as the mixture thickens, giving rise to a grayish-brown color.

The result is poured hot into a bowl and covered in a white cream made from milk, starch, sugar, eggs, and a bit of orange blossom essence, then decorated with almonds and other seeds and nuts, whole or ground, and small candy.

It is also possible to make an assida (porridge/cream) out of other nuts instead of the allepo pine's grains, like hazelnuts, chestnuts, pistachios, or others, but in that case, it won't be assidat zgougou but assidat of what was used.

Usage

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Traditionally, Tunisians exchange bowls of Assidat Zgougou among neighbors and family members on the Mūled, thus rendering decoration as important as the taste. Many use all sorts of seeds and nuts, ground or whole, to vary the forms and colors of the decoration.

References

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  1. ^ Zaroual, H.; Boughattas, F.; Karoui, R. (2019). "Traditional Foods in Maghreb: Production and Research Progress". In Al-Khusaibi, M.; Al-Habsi, N.; Shafiur Rahman, M. (eds.). Traditional Foods: History, Preparation, Processing and Safety. Springer Nature. pp. 50–114. doi:10.1007/978-3-030-24620-4_4. ISBN 9783030246204. S2CID 211804000.
  2. ^ Minervini, F.; Missaoui, J.; Celano, G.; Calasso, M.; Achour, L.; Saidane, D.; Gobbetti, M.; De Angelis, M. (2020). "Use of Autochthonous Lactobacilli to Increase the Safety of Zgougou". Microorganisms. 8 (1): 29. doi:10.3390/microorganisms8010029. PMC 7023124. PMID 31877880.