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Luosifen soup also contains pork bones with spices, which are stewed for about two hours. [12] The main ingredient of the soup is dried Liuzhou rice noodles. Unlike others, Liuzhou rice noodles are produced only with aged rice that has already lost its fat and gelatin component; this is why they are cooked al dente.
However, unlike most of its neighbours, Lao people's affinity for glutinous or sticky rice and Lao cuisine's heavy focus on sticky rice meant that coconut milk and noodles never played a significant role in Lao cuisine. Instead, coconut milk, curry and noodles are limited to a few Laotian soups, noodle dishes and sticky rice-based desserts.
Rice. Short or medium grain white rice. Regular (non-sticky) rice is called uruchi-mai. Mochi rice (glutinous rice)-sticky rice, sweet rice; Genmai (brown rice) Rice bran (nuka) – not usually eaten itself, but used for pickling, and also added to boiling water to parboil tart vegetables; Arare – toasted brown rice grains in genmai cha and ...
A rice soup with fish Khao yam Thailand: A rice salad containing fruit, vegetables, herbs, roasted coconut, and dried prawns Kharcho: Georgia: A beef and rice soup. Kheer/Payas/Payasam: Indian subcontinent: Sweet dish of rice cooked in milk with dry fruit and sugar or jaggery. Cooled before serving. Khichdi: Indian subcontinent
Injo-gogi-bap – a Korean steamed rice wrapped in leftover soybean paste and dressed with a chili sauce. Oncom – one of the traditional staple foods of West Java cuisine of Indonesia, there are two types: red oncom and black oncom. Oncom is closely related to tempeh; both are foods fermented using mold. [9]
Kuyteav (Khmer: គុយទាវ, kŭytéav) is a Cambodian noodle soup consisting of rice noodles with pork stock and toppings. It is a popular breakfast dish across all of Cambodia . The kuyteav can be found at marketplace stalls, roadside vendors, restaurants and in shophouses across the country, and is distinguished by its clear broth and ...
Beef Burrito Casserole. This recipe’s description notes that the combination of rice, beans and salsa always wins. It’s hard to argue with that.
Various types of spiciness in Guizhou cuisine come from the art of using chili peppers in different ways by locals. Hu-la (糊辣; hú là) is created by heat-drying crushed chili pepper. Ciba-la (糍粑辣; cíbā là) refers to both the uncooked mashed chili pepper paste and the chili sauce by simmering the paste in oil.