Basbousa Bil Loz (Basbousa with Almonds)
Submitted by Crys
Basbousa bil loz (Egyptian almond basbousa) cooks toasted semolina and almonds with butter, then thickens with lemon-scented sugar syrup. A stovetop Middle Eastern dessert.
YIELD
6 servingsPREP
5 minCOOK
30 minREADY
50 minBasbousa is the beloved sweet semolina cake of Egypt, Lebanon, and Syria, traditionally baked in pans and soaked with syrup. This version (bil loz, meaning “with almonds") takes a different route: stovetop instead of oven. Toasted semolina and almonds get cooked in butter, then a fragrant lemon syrup thickens them into pudding-like consistency that gets molded and unmolded for serving.
The frying step matters most. Cooking the semolina and chopped almonds in hot butter until golden is what develops nutty depth. Stop too soon and the dessert tastes raw and floury. Push too far and the butter burns and turns bitter. Watch the color and pull when amber.
Adding the boiling syrup slowly is the technique that prevents lumps. Pour it in stages and stir constantly, letting each addition incorporate before adding more. The mixture thickens dramatically, going from loose to spoon-coating in a couple of minutes.
A drop of lemon juice in the syrup keeps the sugar from crystallizing and adds subtle citrus brightness that balances the rich butter and almond flavors.
Pair with a small cup of strong Turkish coffee or sweet mint tea for an authentic Middle Eastern dessert pairing.
Pro Tips
- Use durum semolina (not corn semolina). Corn semolina has a gritty, sandy texture that does not soften properly.
- Stir constantly during the syrup addition. Cooked semolina sticks to the bottom of the pan in seconds if left alone.
- Grease the molds well before pouring. Warm pudding clings to dry surfaces and tears on unmolding.
- Garnish with whole blanched almonds and a dollop of whipped cream just before serving.
Variations
- Add a teaspoon of rosewater or orange blossom water to the syrup for floral notes.
- Substitute pistachios for half the almonds for a Levantine twist.
- Add a quarter teaspoon of cardamom ground into the syrup for warm spice depth.
Ingredients
Directions
Bring water, sugar and lemon juice to a boil.
Simmer for few min.
Chop almonds fine and fry them in hot butter together w/ semolina until golden.
Add hot syrup slowly stirring constantly over low heat until thickened.
Remove from heat and cover.
Let it cool. Pour into indiv. greased molds.
Unmold and serve warm.
Decorate w/ almond and dollop of cream.
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