When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Shrimp and prawn as food - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shrimp_and_prawn_as_food

    In Europe, prawns and especially langoustines are very popular, forming a necessary ingredient in Italian cacciucco, Portuguese caldeirada, Spanish paella de marisco, and many other seafood dishes. Prawns are also consumed as salad, by frying, with rice, and as shrimp guvec — a dish baked in a clay pot — on the Mediterranean coast of Turkey.

  3. Shrimp paste - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shrimp_paste

    Shrimp paste being dried under the sun in Ma Wan, Hong Kong. Shrimp paste or prawn sauce is a fermented condiment commonly used in Southeast Asian and Coastal Chinese cuisines. It is primarily made from finely crushed shrimp or krill mixed with salt, and then fermented for several weeks. It is sold either in its wet form or sun-dried and either ...

  4. Gai lan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gai_lan

    Gai lan, kai-lan, Chinese broccoli, [1] or Chinese kale (Brassica oleracea var. alboglabra) [2] is a leafy vegetable with thick, flat, glossy blue-green leaves with thick stems, and florets similar to (but much smaller than) broccoli. A Brassica oleracea cultivar, gai lan is in the group alboglabra (from Latin albus "white" and glabrus "hairless").

  5. Oyster sauce - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oyster_sauce

    Oyster sauce describes a number of sauces made by cooking oysters.The most common in modern use is a viscous dark brown condiment made from oyster extracts, [1] [2] [3] sugar, salt and water, thickened with corn starch (though original oyster sauce reduced the unrefined sugar through heating, resulting in a naturally thick sauce due to caramelization, not the addition of corn starch).

  6. List of shrimp dishes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_shrimp_dishes

    A spicy seafood dish made from fish or prawns in a dark red and fiery tangy sauce. Balchão is almost like pickling and can be made days in advance without reheating. The traditional balchão uses a paste made from dried shrimp known as galmbo in Konkani. Many people leave out the dried shrimp paste as this lends a fairly strong fishy flavour ...

  7. Eating live seafood - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eating_live_seafood

    The practice of eating live seafood, such as fish, crab, oysters, baby shrimp, or baby octopus, is widespread. Oysters are typically eaten live. [ 1 ] The view that oysters are acceptable to eat, even by strict ethical criteria, has notably been propounded in the seminal 1975 text Animal Liberation , by philosopher Peter Singer .

  8. Hokkien mee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hokkien_mee

    No dark soy sauce used: Dark soy sauce and caramel are used Egg, prawn, squid, fish cake and pork, often with lard, limes and sambal on the side. Prawn is the main ingredient, with slices of chicken or pork, egg, kangkung and sambal added as well. Prawn is the main ingredient with slices of chicken or pork, squid and fish cake.

  9. Har cheong gai - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Har_Cheong_Gai

    Har cheong gai is regarded as one of the most popular family fried chicken dishes in Singapore, [1] and is made with fermented shrimp paste (har cheong) and a host of other spices and ingredients. The shrimp paste used is not the darker Malaysian style paste used for rojak sauce, but the pinkish grey southeastern Chinese style.