In Damascus, crispy pastry sweetens frugal Ramadan

A Syrian vendor in Damascus’ Midan neighborhood sells an array of traditional sweets, which are served in iftar during the holy month of Ramadan. (AP)
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Updated 01 May 2021
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In Damascus, crispy pastry sweetens frugal Ramadan

  • Naaem is prepared by dropping a thin circle of dough into hot oil until it snaps like a crisp

DAMASCUS: Year after year Ramadan meals become more frugal in war-torn Syria as the economy worsens, but Damascus dwellers say a traditional wafer-thin crispy pancake called “naaem” is here to stay.

During the Muslim fasting month, just before sundown, Damascus residents flock to buy the deep-fried sweet from street vendors who make them in bubbling cauldrons all over the sidewalks.
The crunchy pastry — also called “Ramadan bread” — is prepared by dropping a thin circle of dough into hot oil until it snaps like a crisp.
Fished out, the sweet-smelling pancake is then drizzled with dark brown date or grape molasses.
Government employee Abdallah, 51, said he rushes out to buy a naaem to share with his wife and two daughters at the end of every day.
“However tough the circumstances, the naaem is a tradition we can’t go without during Ramadan,” he said.
At around 2,500 Syrian pounds (less than a dollar), the crunchy dessert is still one of the few affordable ones, he said.
Other more elaborate sweets, such as sesame-covered barazeq biscuits or syrupy baklava stuffed with pistachios, have become prohibitively expensive.
Dizzying price hikes have forced many Syrian households like Abdallah’s to cut back on some food items this Ramadan.
This year, red meat, chicken broth, and pistachio-filled sweets are largely off the menu for iftar, the meal at the end of a day’s fasting.
Instead, most families opt for cheaper items to put on their dinner tables such as naaem.
“Children love it, and that’s the most important thing,” Abdallah said.

FASTFACT

In a country where the currency has lost 98 percent of its value since the start of the war in 2011 and millions struggle to put food on the table, that is money many simply do not have.

In one Damascus market, 49-year-old Abu Tareq called out to customers in a bellowing voice, standing near endless airy stacks of crispy naaem.
He said they disappear fast in the run-up to iftar.
“Sweets are an essential part of the Ramadan spread, and naaem are the cheapest and most delicious,” he said.
But the wealthy too are customers, he added, because the dessert is a traditional Ramadan sweet.
Just a stone’s throw away from Abu Tareq’s shop, the scent of more freshly baked pastries wafts out of some of the sweets shops for which Damascus is famous.
But each year, fewer and fewer people buy and take home trays of syrupy treats, baked in ghee and stuffed with nuts or tender date flesh.
A kilo of those sweets can cost up to 50,000 Syrian pounds ($17 at the black-market exchange rate).
In a country where the currency has lost 98 percent of its value since the start of the war in 2011 and millions struggle to put food on the table, that is money many simply do not have.
Instead, crispy “Ramadan bread” is still a delight they can afford.
“The naaem is within everyone’s reach,” said Abu Tareq.
“Ramadan wouldn’t taste the same without it.”


Small dog sole survivor of Peru helicopter crash that killed 15

Updated 54 sec ago
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Small dog sole survivor of Peru helicopter crash that killed 15

  • Rescue workers found the caramel-colored dog among the twisted wreckage of the Mi-17 helicopter
  • Local media reported that the dog appeared OK, but as a precaution was taken to a veterinary clinic

LIMA: The only survivor of a military helicopter crash in southern Peru that killed 15 people was a small dog belonging to a colonel who was among the passengers, an air force source told AFP Tuesday.
Rescue workers found the caramel-colored dog among the twisted wreckage of the Mi-17 helicopter that crashed Sunday. It was lying next to the body of its owner, Col. Javier Nole, 50, who was on board with his wife and two daughters.
“It’s Col. Nole’s pet; it’s the only survivor,” the source, who requested anonymity, told AFP.
Local media reported that the dog appeared OK, but as a precaution was taken to a veterinary clinic.
Seven children were among the 15 fatalities when the Russian-made aircraft crashed in the Arequipa region. The helicopter had been recently deployed in rescue operations for victims of floods there.
It had taken off from the city of Pisco, in the Ica region. Rescuers located the wreckage on Monday just over 300 kilometers (186 miles) away near Chala Viejo, a town close to the Pacific coast in Arequipa.
The air force has launched an investigation to determine the cause of the accident.