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Poi (pronounced po-ee) is made from cooked, mashed, and sometimes lightly fermented taro. It is the starch staple of the native Hawaiian diet. Laulau is made with beef, pork, or chicken and salted butterfish wrapped in taro leaves and then ti leaves. It was traditionally prepared in an imu.
Poi is a traditional staple food in the Polynesian diet, made from taro. Traditional poi is produced by mashing cooked taro on a wooden pounding board ( papa kuʻi ʻai ), with a carved pestle ( pōhaku kuʻi ʻai ) made from basalt, calcite, coral, or wood.
The thickness of poi was often identified by the number of fingers needed to eat it: "three-finger" poi has the thinness of applesauce; "two-finger", thickness of pudding, or the thickest, "one-finger poi" often non-diluted and non-fermented freshly pounded taro called paʻiʻai. A traditional lūʻau consists of food such as:
The Sino-Korean word yukpo (육포, 肉脯) is a compound of yuk (육, 肉), meaning "meat", and po (포, 脯), meaning "dried meat or fish".Because beef is the default meat in Korean cuisine, many beef dishes such as yukpo and bulgogi are referred using the words gogi (고기) or yuk (육, 肉), meaning "meat", rather than soegogi (쇠고기) or uyuk (우육, 牛肉), meaning "cow meat".
Meat or fish that is thinly sliced and dried is usually called geonpo (건포; 乾脯), while meat that is pounded flat and dried is called pyeonpo (편포; 片脯).Dried meat in general can be referred to as poyuk (포육; 脯肉), with yuk (육; 肉) meaning "meat", while the differently ordered compound yukpo (육포; 肉脯) refers to dried beef slices.
The paniolos chewed pipikaula ("beef rope"), a salted and dried beef that resembles beef jerky. [53] Pipikaula would usually be broiled before serving. [54] With the influence of Asian cooking, beef strips are commonly marinated in soy sauce. [53] When beef is dried in the sun, a screened box is traditionally used to keep the meat from dust and ...
About 70 traditional meat and food companies are involved with cultivated meat in some way. And regulatory approvals in the U.S. are expected to be followed by many more elsewhere.
"Po' boy bread" is a local style of French bread traditionally made with less flour and more water than a traditional baguette, yielding a wetter dough that produces a lighter and fluffier bread that is less chewy. The recipe was developed in the 1700s in the Gulf South because the humid climate was not conducive to growing wheat, requiring ...