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Arroz negro Place of origin: Oaxaca and Campeche, Mexico. Main ingredients: rice, black bean broth, onions, epazote, serrano, pepper and salt. Arroz negro ("black rice") is a Mexican dish made with rice, in which its dark color comes from black bean broth. The dark broth is made by cooking black beans with onion and butter in sufficient water.
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.
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]
Mexican rice is prepared by rinsing and briefly soaking medium-grained white rice and then toasting the rice in a heavy saucepan with fat, such as lard or cooking oil.After the grains of rice start to turn golden and translucent, tomato, onion, and garlic are all blended in either chicken broth, vegetable stock or a solution of water and chicken soup flavoring to make a sauce which is added to ...
Hot soups include sopa de gato (made with bread), caldillo de perro (fish soup with orange juice) and migas canas. Fish dishes include pescaíto frito, soldaditos de Pavía, and parpandúa. Cured meats include serrano ham and ibérico ham. Typical drinks in the area include anise, wine (such as Malaga, Jerez, and Pedro Ximénez), and sherry brandy.
"Picadillo" was not always made with beef; "picadillo de ave" was a minced fowl with white sauce. Pasteles de pollos y pichones (chicken and squab pastry) was made as a savory pie with alternating layers of chicken and squab with a picadillo of minced veal, bacon , ham fried in lard with onion, mushrooms, apples, artichokes, tomatoes, and a ...
The quesadilla sincronizada (Spanish pronunciation: [kesaˈðiʝa siŋkɾoniˈsaða], "synchronized quesadilla") is a flour tortilla-based sandwich [1] made by placing ham, [2] vegetables (like tomatoes, onion, etc.) and a portion of Oaxaca cheese (or any type of cheese) between two flour tortillas. [3]
Caldo de costilla ("rib broth"), served as breakfast in Colombia; Caldo de pollo, Latin American chicken soup; Caldo de queso, also known as Sonoran cheese soup, served in central Mexico and southwest United States; Caldo de siete mares ("seven seas soup"), also known as caldo de mariscos ("seafood soup"), commonly served in Mexico