Rendered at 06:10:07 05/06/25
10th of Ramadan (city) Iftar Attar Oil Sets "Tamar Hindi, Carob, Doum, Hibiscus"
£9.01 GBP
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United States

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Shipping options
Return policy
None: All purchases final
Details
Purchase protection
Payment options
PayPal accepted
PayPal Credit accepted
Venmo accepted
PayPal, MasterCard, Visa, Discover, and American Express accepted
Maestro accepted
Amazon Pay accepted
Nuvei accepted
Item traits
Category: | |
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Quantity Available: |
Only one in stock, order soon |
Condition: |
New |
Gender: |
Unisex |
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Free shipping on orders over $150.00 |
Price discount: |
5% off w/ $80.00 spent |
Posted for sale: |
More than a week ago |
Item number: |
1710116856 |
Item description
1ml Sweetened Karkadey (hibiscus rose petals), Erq Sous (licorice), Humous (chickpea drink), minted tea, 1ml Kamar El Din (dried apricot paste juice), 1ml Kharoub (carob), Tamr Hindi (Tamarind), are the prevalent drinks found at most hotels and coffee shops during Ramadan.
Qamar ud-Din (??? ?????) means "Moon of the Religion", and also refers to an apricot-based beverage.
Ramadan’s Drinks
Sweetened Karkadey (hibiscus rose petals), Kharoub (Carob Juice), Tamr Hini (Tamarind), Date Shake (Doum Tamar Dates ??? ????) Date Shakes Qamar Al-Deen (Apricot Juice ??? ?????)
are the prevalent drinks found at most hotels and coffee shops during Ramadan.
Qamar Al-deen drink is very popular in Upper Egypt especially during the holy month of Ramadan.
Many people prefer to drink Qamr al-Din juice in the blessed month of Ramadan, because they know its multiple benefits, and for those who do not know this drink, it is the sweetened and dried apricot juice.
Etymology
Another theory holds that apricot season coincided with the sighting of the new moon marking the beginning of Ramadan in the year when Qamar al-din was invented. A similar theory, widespread in Egypt, traces the name's origin to a Caliph who was known to celebrate with Qamar al-din upon seeing the crescent moon during Ramadan...
Qamar Al-Din is an apricot drink popular throughout Lower Egypt, especially in Luxor Egypt . It’s usually prepared during the holy month of Ramadan, when Sufi People In Lower Luxor Egypt fast from sunrise to sunset. The drink is typically served with Iftar, the meal that breaks the fast at the end of the day.
There are many versions of why the dried apricot paste was named Qamar al-din. One version states that the man who invented the process was called Qamar al-Din. It is said that he was so handsome that he looked like the moon (Qamar ???). He was named after the moon and his invention was named after him.
Another version states that the dried apricot paste becomes available in the market with the sighting of the new moon of the month of Ramadan which marks the beginning of the month of fasting. That is the reason why it was named Qamar Al-din.
Qamar Al-Deen drink is very popular in the Middle East especially during the holy month of Ramadan. It is a forgotten drink all year long until Ramadan comes in. It is one of Ramadan Drinkss that is rarely in our fridge the rest of the year.
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NOTE: WE IMPORT OUR OILS DIRECTLY FROM EGYPT, SO IF YOU'RE THINKING OF BUYING FROM ANOTHER VENDOR WE CAN NOT GUARANTEE THAT YOU WILL BE RECEIVING THE SAME ITEM LISTING ABOVE.
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- 10th of Ramadan (city) Iftar Attar Oil Sets "Tamar Hindi, Carob, Doum, Hibiscus"
- 1 in stock
- Handling time 7 days.
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