Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Still life with a peacock pie, 1627, by Dutch artist Pieter Claesz, showing various dishes from the 17th century including roast meat, breads, nuts, wine, apples, dried fruits, along with an elaborate meat pie decorated like a peacock.
Kaasstengels are not to be confused with Kaastengels, a Dutch brand of deep fried fingerfood. [citation needed] Kaastengels resemble spring rolls the size of a finger, filled with cheese.
Catalan cuisine relies heavily on ingredients popular along the Mediterranean coast, including fresh vegetables (especially tomato, garlic, eggplant (aubergine), capsicum, and artichoke), wheat products (bread, pasta), Arbequina olive oils, wines, legumes (beans, chickpeas), mushrooms (particularly wild mushrooms), nuts (pine nuts, hazelnuts and almonds), all sorts of pork preparations ...
Spanish cuisine (Spanish: Cocina española) consists of the traditions and practices of Spanish cooking.It features considerable regional diversity, with significant differences among the traditions of each of Spain's regional cuisines.
Rawon (Javanese: ꦫꦮꦺꦴꦤ꧀) is an Indonesian beef soup. [3] Originating from the Javanese cuisine of East Java, rawon utilizes the black keluak nut as the main seasoning, which gives a dark color and nutty flavor to the soup; thus rawon is often described as "black beef soup".
A recipe in a cookbook for pancakes with the prepared ingredients. A recipe is a set of instructions that describes how to prepare or make something, especially a dish of prepared food.
Sambal is an Indonesian chili sauce or paste, typically made from a mixture of chilli peppers with secondary ingredients such as shrimp paste, garlic, ginger, shallot, scallion, palm sugar, and lime juice.
The etymology of the name ketoprak is unknown, and its name similarity to the Javanese folk-drama is peculiar. However, according to popular Betawi tradition, ketoprak was actually derived from the acronym of ketupat tahu digeprak, [1] to refer its ingredients; which are ket from ketupat, to from tahu and toge, and prak from digeprak (Betawi for: "mashed" or "crushed"), which describes the ...