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Caldillo de almejas: Clam soup [9] (“caldillo” is a clear thin soup). Chupe de locos: A rich stew made with the loco or Chilean abalone, served with bread and baked in clay pots or “Paila de greda” Sopa de ostras: Oyster soup; Pastel de pescado: Fish pie; Arrollado de chancho and Arrollado de huaso: Pork roll and chilli roll.
Arroz con pollo (Spanish for rice with chicken) is a traditional dish of Latin America. It typically consists of chicken cooked with rice, onions, saffron, and a potential plethora of other grains or vegetables.
Caldillo de congrio (Spanish for cusk-eel stock) is a Chilean fish soup. The dish is made of congrio dorado (pink cusk-eel) or congrio colorado (red cusk-eel), [1] cusk-eel species common in the Chilean Sea. [2] [3] The dish is made by boiling together fish heads, onion, garlic, coriander, carrots, and pepper. Once these are boiled, only the ...
Caldillo de perro (literally "dog soup") is a fish soup of Andalusia (southern Spain). [1] The name is said to come from "el Perro," the nickname of a shipboard cook in El Puerto de Santa María. [2] The main ingredients are hake, garlic, olive oil, lemons, and Seville oranges. [3] It is customarily served with sour orange juice. It is a common ...
Preparing a shrimp arroz caldoso. Unlike a paella, the pan is deep. Arroz caldoso is a dish which originated in Spain. It literally means "brothy rice" and consists of broth and rice with diverse flavourings and extra ingredients. [1] [2] The recipe is quite varied depending in which region of the Iberian Peninsula it is prepared.
A much rarer variant of arroz caldo is arroz caldong palaka, which uses frog legs (palaka means "frog" in Tagalog). [1] Non-traditional variants include vegan versions which use mushrooms or tofu instead of meat. [20] Goto is closely related to arroz caldo but is regarded as a different type of lugaw since it does not rely heavily on ginger. [2]
Arròs a banda with aioli.. Arròs a banda (Catalan term for rice on the side, translated as arroz a banda in Spanish) is a dish of rice cooked in fish stock, typical of the coastal area of Alicante (and, per extension, in most of the Valencian Community), Spain, and distinct from the paella of Valencia.
Arroz a la valenciana (Spanish) or Arroz à valenciana is considered as a part of Philippine cuisine. It is considered as the Philippine version of paella. [43] The Philippine version uses glutinous rice; otherwise, the ingredients are the same. In the Philippines, arroz a la valenciana refers to chicken, and longganisa (chorizo) versions. [44]