Faloodeh
Faloodeh, or paloodeh, is a traditional Iranian cold dessert similar to a sorbet. It consists of thin vermicelli-sized noodles made from starch in a semi-frozen syrup containing sugar and rose water. Faloodeh is often served with lime juice and sometimes ground pistachios.
In Iran, faloodeh is sold in ice cream stores and coffee shops in flavors such as pistachio, saffron, rose water, and honey, and can be served alongside bastani sonnati, a traditional Persian ice cream. Faloodeh Shirazi, a version from the city of Shiraz, is particularly well-known.
In 2023, the Ministry of Cultural Heritage, Tourism and Handicrafts added faloodeh-making to Iran's List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity.
History
The Persian word paloodeh is derived from the verb paloodan, which means "to refine". Faloodeh is an Arabicized form of paloodeh that appeared after the Arab conquest of Iran, due to a lack of the phoneme in Standard Arabic. In Arabic medieval sources, it was known as faloothaj, for example in Al-Muḥkam wa-al-muḥīt al-aʻẓam.In the 16th to 18th centuries, the Indo-Persian Mughal kings who ruled South Asia created a cold dessert beverage called falooda, which is a derivative of faloodeh.. Moreover, the Yunnanese desert paoluda also originates from this dessert.