Sütlü Nuriye
Course | Dessert |
---|---|
Place of origin | Turkey |
Main ingredients | Dough, butter, hazelnuts or walnuts; sugar, water, lemon juice, milk |
Sütlü Nuriye (Milky Nuriye) is a Turkish dessert similar to baklava, but instead of syrup it contains milk, which gives a whitish look to the dessert. The name means Nuriye (Turkish female name) with milk.
History[]
According to the owner of Güllüoğlu Baklava the desserts origins go back to the 1980 Turkish coup d'état during which a military officer purchased baklava and found the price to be too high. The officer complained to İsmail Hakki Akansel, who had been appointed Mayor of Istanbul in the aftermath of the coup. Akansel responded by setting a price ceiling on baklava, which was announced during Ramadan. The pastry shop was unable to make the traditional baklava recipe profitable under the new pricing rules. To lower the cost of making baklava, pastry chefs substituted hazelnuts for pistachios and added milk to increase the weight of each tray of baklava. The new recipe became known as Sütlü Nuriye.[1]
See also[]
- Bülbül yuvası
- Şöbiyet
- Turkish cuisine
References[]
- ^ "Ihtilal Tatlısı Sütlü Nuriye'nin Trajikomik Hikayesi". Milliyet Haber. Retrieved 2018-11-09.
- Turkish pastries
- Turkish words and phrases
- Turkish cuisine stubs