Suspiro_a_la_Limeña

Suspiro de limeña

Suspiro de limeña

Peruvian dessert


Suspiro de limeña or Suspiro a la limeña (lit.'Sigh of the lady from Lima') is a dessert of Peruvian gastronomy.

Quick Facts Alternative names, Type ...

Origin

The origins of the dessert are in the middle of the nineteenth century in Lima, Peru. The dessert is based around manjar blanco, a similar confection to dulce de leche, itself coming from blancmange, a dish from the Middle Ages. Blancmange came to Peru from Spain. It consisted of a thick cream made of milk, sugar, almond flour and some Iberian ingredients. An even older recipe had it made of chicken breast boiled in milk, almonds and thickened with flour and was meant as a bland food for the sick and weak. The other element of the Suspiro de Limeña is meringue, also brought to Peru by the Spaniards.

The dessert is consumed mainly in Lima and in other coastal Peruvian cities. It is a staple of Peruvian restaurants abroad.

Preparation

The manjar blanco layer of the dessert is made with whole milk and sugar boiled until thick and caramel colored to which are added egg yolk and sometimes, but not necessarily vanilla essence.

The merengue top layer is made from egg whites and port wine syrup (made from port wine and sugar boiled together until thickened) and is sprinkled with cinnamon.

See also

References


Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Suspiro_a_la_Limeña, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.