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The fresh za'atar herb is used in a number of dishes. Börek is a common bread pastry that can be stuffed with various ingredients, including za'atar. [22] A salad made of fresh za'atar leaves (Arabic: سلطة الزعتر الأخضر, romanized: salatet al-zaatar al-akhdar) is also popular throughout the Levant. [9]
The leaves can be used as salad, herb, [19] boiled as a vegetable, [20] in soup, or as an ingredient for a sauce that may be a substitute for pesto in lieu of basil. Leaves are also often used to make garlic butter. [21] In Russia the stems are preserved by salting and eaten as a salad.
A spice market in Istanbul. Night spice market in Casablanca. This is a list of culinary herbs and spices.Specifically these are food or drink additives of mostly botanical origin used in nutritionally insignificant quantities for flavoring or coloring.
Eruca vesicaria is an annual plant [5] growing to 20 to 100 cm (8 to 40 in) in height. The pinnate leaves are deeply lobed with four to ten, small, lateral lobes and a large terminal lobe.
This page is a sortable table of plants used as herbs and/or spices.This includes plants used as seasoning agents in foods or beverages (including teas), plants used for herbal medicine, and plants used as incense or similar ingested or partially ingested ritual components.
A salad that originated in and named for the city of Nice and consists of tomatoes, native Nicoise olives, young raw fava beans, young raw artichokes, hard-boiled eggs, radish, green onions, green peppers and garnished with tinned anchovies. It is served with black pepper and olive oil. Olivier salad Russian salad: Russia: Potato and meat salad
The plant is used as a salad herb by the Haida and the Nisga'a people. It is common in the Nass Valley of British Columbia. [49] Biting stonecrop contains high quantities of piperidine alkaloids (namely (+)-sedridine, (−)-sedamine, sedinone and isopelletierine), which give it a sharp, peppery, acrid taste and make it somewhat toxic
Salad burnet was called a favorite herb by Francis Bacon, was brought to the New World with the first English colonists, and was given special mention by Thomas Jefferson. [14] It declined in popularity as a kitchen herb, but As of 2022 [update] , is becoming more popular again, for food and as an ornamental.