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Reply to "Cooking for guest family during Ramadan"
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[quote=Anonymous]"Tea" is kind of broad - Turkish tea for example, is very different than Indian tea. But as pp mentioned, breaking one's fast usually goes something like this: (1) Iftar (date + snacky finger foods, water/drinks) (2) prayer (3) main dinner "Iftar" is the breaking of the fast, and it's customary to break it with a date, and then some snacky finger foods. Other than dates, there aren't any common elements and it varies from culture to culture. But common snacky things include fruit, cheeses, maybe some cookies/crackers, nuts, etc. Dinner (after prayer) has no set theme. It can be pizza, or chicken tikka, or kabobs, or lasagna, or whatever. Most people who fast are hungry for just about anything! Dinner depends on culture to culture, and person to person. It's like any other normal dinner, except maybe more quantity (to compensate for not eating all day). [/quote]
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