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  2. Lao cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lao_cuisine

    It is communally and competitively drunk through straws at festive occasions. It can be likened to sake in appearance and flavor. Lao lao or Lao alcohol is more like a whiskey. It is also called lao khao or, in English, white alcohol. However, there is also a popular variant of lao lao made from purple rice, which has a pinkish hue.

  3. Lao-Lao - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lao-Lao

    The name lao-Lao is not the same word repeated twice, but two different words pronounced with different tones: the first, ເຫລົ້າ, means "alcohol" and is pronounced with a low-falling tone in the standard dialect, while the second, ລາວ, means Laotian ("Lao") and is pronounced with a high(-rising) tone.

  4. llaollao - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Llaollao

    llaoIIao (pronounced as "yao yao" [1]) is a Spanish frozen yogurt franchise brand founded in Denia in the province of Alicante, Spain. [2] As of March 2016, llaollao is present in more than 180 establishments.

  5. Lūʻau (food) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lūʻau_(food)

    [27] [28] Because of the rising prices of taro (and food in general), ... List of stews; Laing (food), a similar native dish from the Philippines; Callaloo, ...

  6. Tsokolate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tsokolate

    Tsokolate (Tagalog: [tʃoko'late] choh-koh-LAH-teh), also spelled chocolate, is a native Filipino thick hot chocolate drink. It is made from tabliya or tablea, tablets of pure ground roasted cacao beans, dissolved in water and milk.

  7. Sili ice cream - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sili_Ice_Cream

    Sili ice cream is a Filipino ice cream flavor prepared using labuyo chili, coconut milk, puréed strawberries and sugar. It was invented by the 1st Colonial Grill restaurant in Albay in 2004 and has since become a highly popular flavor.

  8. Taho - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taho

    Some customers in residential areas tend to use their own cups, and the vendors price their product accordingly (usually at around twenty Philippine pesos, or US$0.42 for a standard-sized mug). Using a wide, shallow metal watch glass -shaped scoop , they skim the surface of the bean curd and toss out any excess water, before scooping the bean ...

  9. Lucky Me (noodles) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lucky_Me_(noodles)

    Supreme in La Paz Batchoy flavor, marketed as the first Filipino dish-flavored no-cook cup noodles, and Lucky Me! Special (now split into True to Taste and Pasta) in 2009, which consists of noodles based on local and international flavors such as Lomi (egg noodles in seafood flavor), Jjamppong (spicy Korean noodles), Curly Spaghetti, Baked Mac ...