Sunday, May 5, 2019

Ramadan, Christmas, Hannukah, tacos...Eid cookies recipe!




Egyptian Food Made Easy Cookbook
New release

The first year I moved from Egypt to Canada I believe it was August and we were fasting during Ramadan. It was the longest Ramadan ever!
I was willing to drop off my kids at daycare. I looked exhausted, and I was heavily breathing, then the teacher asked:"Are you ok?"."Yes," I said.
Then she responded:"Do you need a cup of water?"
I said:"Thank you, but I'm fasting."
She looked perplexed when she asked one more question: "Fasting? In this weather? And not even a sip of water? Why?"
I told her:"It's Ramadan. Muslims are supposed to fast.”
With more curiosity and empathy she asked: "What's Ramadan? Is that's why you're wearing that headcover? And what's the moral behind the fasting?"
And I went like jaw-dropping, I don't know was it my blood sugar that seemed too low to respond faster to her flood of questions or was it me lacking the answer. I never asked myself those questions before. Honestly, I just go with the flow, this is what I have been doing since I hit puberty and simply, we do it because I was taught that fasting in Ramadan was obligatory on every Muslim.
Honestly, the same thing will happen to you if you are only with your own people, your own cult for a long time, where no one asks those kinds of questions or else they will be thought of as doubters or non believing beings.
Then, I started to ask myself the exact same questions. Not doubting my faith, but exploring my new self and renewing my beliefs. After searching, exploring and navigation, I realized an essential thing. I realized that to appease someone you really love, you show your love and commitment in many ways, maybe those ways are tough, hard on you, to some folks they seem not making any sense or weird, but that's how you show your loyalty to someone you cherish. Now, tell me how it should be with your God?
The older you get, the more you realize your need for something bigger than you, a divine being with extraordinary powers, which you can count on if things go out of your control, complain to when things turned out not to be fair, someone omnipotent enough to  admit his capabilities to solve anything and you trust him enough to manage things for the best. It's a spiritual need and it must be fulfilled. People who believe in the supreme divinity will call it God, and folks who believe in mundane things will call it science, mother earth, the universe, tacos, whatever…
And no matter how you wanted to express your love and fulfill your spiritual needs, no matter the way you've chosen to worship the God, whether you pray in a synagogue, church or a mosque, whether you keep your hands gathered close to your chest, you hum some mantras, or you bend and subjugate mumbling some verses from your holy book, or you meditate on your yoga mat, you get the feel, you get the spirit or close.
The spirit of Ramadan to Muslims is like the spirit of Hanukah to Jews or the spirit of Christmas to Christians, it's the month of giving and forgiving. The month of sharing and gatherings. As a Muslim, you are supposed to practice five things to consider yourself as one. You must witness that no God but God and Mohamed is his prophet, and regarding prophecy, Muslims should love and believe in all prophets, including Moses, Jesus, Jonah, Elijah, etc. Equally and revere them as much as Mohamed. Peace be upon them all.
Secondly, Muslims pray five times a day at different times of the day. The prayer itself includes yogic movements and reciting some verses from the Holy Book, the Quraan.
Then Muslims should fast in Ramadan for the whole month. It's obligatory unless you're a kid, physically unable, pregnant, elder, or traveling. Fasting starts from sun dawn until sunset, no food, and no water. Muslims follow the lunar calendar, so Ramadan never falls the same day according to the Gregorian calendar, and it comes 11 days earlier each year. Every month starts when the moon begins as a lunar eclipse, and when it is observed as a full moon, that means the month is halfway through, and when the moon completely vanishes, it means that the month has ended.
Ramadan is so special to Muslims because it's the month when the Quran was revealed. Also, Muslims believe that all the good deeds are multiple folds rewarded in this month.
The spirit of Ramadan to Muslims resembles the spirit of Christmas to Christians or Hanukah to Jews, Diwali to Hindu. It's the month of giving and forgiving, the month of sharing and gatherings and after it ends Muslims celebrate with a feast.
To achieve social justice and equity, every Muslim is obliged to give a share from his total earned money to help those who are needy. Also, Muslims are supposed to make a pilgrimage in the holy city of Mecca, where they circumambulate around the cubic figure Kaaba.
Well, Islam is well known for its diversity and inclusivity; whether you're a revert or born as a Muslim, you get there with your own culture.
 One of the most delicious yummy traditions we -as Egyptian Muslims do- in Ramadan and Eid is making special treats. 
I'm going to share with you one of the treats we call it  Eid cookies, and we are making them to celebrate this occasion.
It's easy and simple.

Ingredients: 
For every cup of all-purpose white flour add one-third of ghee or melted butter, two-thirds of a tablespoon baking soda, a speck of salt, two tablespoons of sesame seed, a speck of Mahlab" cookies spice and it's optional", one or two tablespoons of  ground sugar- if you don't have any, mix a cup of granulated normal sugar in your blender for one minute until it becomes a powder-.
Recipe:
 1-Mix all the ingredients and make small balls, then squish it with a cup, then decorate it- sometimes I use kitchen utensils.
Maybe you can stuff it with your favorite nuts or keep it plain. Both are scrumptious!
2- Put your rounded cookies on a tray sprayed with oil or butter, then put them in the oven for 17 minutes at 350 F.



3- Let the cookies cool off, then add the rest of your powder sugar on top of the cookies.
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