Aish el saraya

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Aish el saraya

Aish el saraya is an ideal dessert to serve at the end of an iftar meal. In it, tender, creamy layers of enriched, sweetened bread and cream come together to create a rich, mouth-wateringly tasty dish. Baked to golden perfection and sprinkled with ground pistachios, this bread pudding-like treat looks enticing and tastes amazing. Fortunately, it is very simple to make! Use our easy aish el saraya recipe this Ramadan to make a traditional and delicious dessert in a baked version.

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https://www.arlafoods.co.uk/recipes/aish-el-saraya/

Ingredients

Recipe for 4 people portions
Cream
220 g
White toast bread
1 pack
Butter
225 g
Arla Cravendale Whole milk
240 ml
Sugar
1 tbsp
Semolina
2 tbsp
Rose water
1 tsp
Ground cardamom seeds
1 tsp
Sugar syrup
240 ml

To decorate

Ground pistachios

Instructions

Step 1

  • Preheat oven.
  • Cut off the toast's crust. Then, cut the toast into small pieces and place them in an oven-proof dish.
  • Melt butter and pour it over the toast bits. Press them with your hands until they have fully absorbed the butter. Then, arrange them in one or more even layers in the dish (if they are thin, we recommend multiple layers).
  • Pour cream over the butter-coated toast.

Step 2

  • In a pan, heat the Arla Cravendale Whole milk and add sugar, semolina, cardamom, and rosewater. Leave it until it starts to boil and condense.
  • Pour the milk mixture over the cream layer. Then, use a fork to make small holes in it so the toast beneath can absorb the milk mixture.
  • Transfer the baking dish to the oven and bake it for [Arla, please advise] minutes until all sides are golden.

Step 3

  • Take it out of the oven and pour the sugar syrup over the baked aish el saraya. Then, leave it until it has fully absorbed the syrup and it has cooled down

Step 4

  • Cut it into rectangles and decorate it with ground pistachios.

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Serving suggestion

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Tips

If you do not have any toast bread in the pantry, other types of bread like white bread, sandwich bread, brioche bread, or even rusks may also be used for aish el saraya. Since the bread is enriched with melted butter and flavoured with sweet milk, there is no need to use freshly baked or just bought bread. As such, this aish el saraya recipe can be a delicious and practical way for you to use leftover bread.

Questions about aish el saraya

Making a tasty and traditional Ramadan dessert is incredibly easy with our recipe for aish el saraya. To learn more about this delicious dessert, read our answers to the most frequently asked questions below.

What is aish el saraya?

How to make aish el saraya?

Can you make aish el saraya in advance?

How long will aish el saraya last?

Baked aish el saraya with cream

This classic dish turns humble ingredients like bread, butter, and milk into a deliciously tender dessert. In an aish el saraya dessert, white toast is moistened and flavoured first with melted butter and then with a thick milk mixture with sugar, semolina, and ground cardamom.

The result is a flavourful, tender bread base perfect for topping with rich cream allowed to broil in the oven. The finished dessert is, as is standard for many delicious Middle Eastern desserts, drenched with simple syrup to ensure it is moist and sweet. It may be served with homemade syrup on the side allowing family and guests to adjust the level of sweetness individually.

Sweet, soft, and creamy layers with crunchy pistachios on top

The best aish el saraya recipe allows you to make a dessert that will delight anyone lucky enough to get a taste of it. The flavour profile of the bread base is quite multi-faceted. It is rich, milky, and buttery but is brightened by the powerful flavours of semolina, ground cardamom, and rosewater that imbue it with nutty, citrussy, and floral qualities. The aromatic nature of this combination is a true Middle Eastern classic.

The contrasts between the spiced and sweetened bread, the unsweetened but naturally rich and velvety cream, and the crunchy and nutty pistachios are amazing. For more tasty desserts featuring pistachios and cream, check out our recipes for qatayef, balah al sham, and mafroukeh.

Traditional sweet dessert for Ramadan

Though it may also be served as an even quicker no-bake dessert, baking your aish el saraya deepens its flavours and gives it a different look as the cream turns a lovely golden colour. As it bakes, the aromatic ingredients used to flavour the bread develop and grow. The sugar in the base melts and gives the dessert an almost caramelised and toffee-like taste that makes the sweetness of it quite complex and interesting.

Add your own touch

An easy way to make this recipe your own is to experiment with crunchy toppings. For a bright addition that will add a fresh touch to this rich dish, try using pomegranate seeds. These ruby-red, jewel-like seeds will look beautiful with the green pistachios and burst with flavourful juice as you bite into them. Their sweet-sour flavour will perfectly complement the buttery, creamy goodness of a baked aish el saraya.

Another way to mix things up with your aish el saraya recipe is to add other or additional spices to the sweetened milk used to flavour the toast. Tasty options, that will also taste great with the traditional cardamom, include sweet-spicy cinnamon and aromatic allspice. The milk may, of course, also be flavoured with other aromatics like floral orange blossom water or sweet, warming vanilla instead of rosewater.