Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Zatarain's is an American food and spice company based in New Orleans, Louisiana, in the United States that makes a large family of products with seasonings and spices that are part of the cultural cuisine and heritage of Louisiana and New Orleans' Cajun and Creole traditions that includes root beer extract, seasonings, boxed and frozen foods.
A pork chop served atop dirty rice. Dirty rice is a traditional Louisiana Creole dish made from white rice which gets a "dirty" color from being cooked with small pieces of pork, beef or chicken, green bell pepper, celery, and onion, [1] and spiced with cayenne and black pepper. [2] Parsley and chopped green onions are common garnishes.
Photos: The brands. Design: Eat This, Not That!If dinner time has you reaching for a protein, a vegetable, and a starch, seasoned rice likely has a spot in your pantry. Whether it's 90-second rice ...
It works for other types of rice, too. For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
Rice has been a major agricultural export crop in southwest Louisiana since the late 1800s [1] and has become a staple of local cuisine in dishes such as boudin, gumbo and étouffée. Rice and gravy is traditionally made from cheaper cuts of meat and cooked in a cast iron pot for a long time in order to let the tough cuts of meat become tender. [2]
Brown rice does have more fiber, fat and a touch more protein than white rice because of the way it’s processed. Whole grains are made of three parts: the germ, bran and endosperm.
Microwave pot for cooking rice. A microwave rice cooker is a container designed specifically for cooking rice. Some container consists of three parts: an outer bowl, a fitted lid with steam vents, and an inner bowl with a finely perforated base. Some others have only one container and the double-layered lid fitted with a steam vent.
Emile A. Zatarain Sr. (c. 1866–1959) [1] was a grocer and food entrepreneur who trademarked root beer and built a business selling spices, condiments, and foods flavored in the culinary traditions of New Orleans and Louisiana's Creole and Cajun cultures to the world via the brand that today is known simply as Zatarain's.