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Persian Love Cake: Bake Love Not War

Iran is often talked about negatively in headlines, but Iranian culture has always spoken in poetry, hospitality, fragrance, and food. Persian cuisine is generous, thoughtful, and deeply symbolic. To cook with their ingredients and flavors is to participate quietly in something much older than politics. Enter the Persian Love Cake. 

Rooted in folklore and celebrating the bounty of Iran, Persian Love Cake is the kind of cake that doesn’t need frosting drama or chocolate overload to make an impression. The cake is fragrant, tender, lightly sweet, and scented with rose, citrus, and cardamom—ingredients that have been loved in Iranian kitchens for centuries. Truly, this poetry on a plate will entice all of your senses.  So this Valentine’s Day, instead of leaning into chaos (or overpriced restaurant menus), let’s do something radical: let’s bake with love.

Where did this cake come from?

There’s a popular legend that a Persian woman once baked a cake infused with rose water and spices to win the heart of a prince. Whether or not that story is historically accurate, the flavors themselves absolutely are.

Rose water, cardamom, citrus zest, pistachios—these ingredients are deeply rooted in Iranian and Persian-inspired sweets. They show up in everything from saffron rice pudding to delicate cookies served with tea. In the case of this cake, rose water adds floral perfume, not sweetness. Cardamom and cinnamon bring warmth and depth. Lemon zest and juice keep everything bright. Almond flour + all-purpose flour give the cake a tender, almost plush crumb.

To see the technique of this beautiful cake, and to learn more about Persian culture and their Persian New Year called Nowruz, click on my new video below:



Persian Love Cake

Ingredients:

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