cooking.nytimes.com
Grilled Rose-Water Poundcake Recipe
Rose water adds a delicate, floral note to this otherwise traditional pound cake Two teaspoons is just enough to stand up to the smoky flavors of a light toasting on the grill Serve it all with a peach compote, also with a touch of rose water, for an elegant warm-weather treat.
butter, flour, baking powder, salt, sugar, eggs, rose water
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Egyptian Rose Leaves
These make a lovely cookie for Valentine's Day. NOTE: Rose water is not strong enough flavoring. Be sure to use rose fluid, available from many drugstores. You can use rose water, but you will have to double the amount.
shortening, sugar, eggs, rosewater, flour, salt
cooking.nytimes.com
Pistachio and Rose Water Semolina Cake Recipe
Making this cake, which is adapted from "Sweet," by Yotam Ottolenghi and Helen Goh, is a labor of love, but that’s only appropriate, for a cake adorned with rose petals If you want to save time, however, you can do without the petals or use store-bought dried rose petals — the cake and cream are both special enough for those you feed to know you love them If you are going all out with the roses, red or pink petals are a matter of preference; the red petals will turn a deep purple once candied
egg white, sugar, pistachios, cardamom, almond meal, semolina flour, baking powder, salt, butter, eggs, zest, rose water, vanilla, greek yogurt, confectioners sugar, lemon juice