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  2. This new walk-up restaurant in Warner Robins offers ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/walk-restaurant-warner-robins...

    The simple menu offers a variety of tacos, pupusas and tortas ranging in price from $3 to $8 each. This new walk-up restaurant in Warner Robins offers ‘Salvadoran delights’ made to order Skip ...

  3. Pupusa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pupusa

    Guinness World Records listed the largest pupusa at 15 feet (4.6 m), created in Olocuilta, El Salvador, on 8 November 2015. [23] This record was broken on 28 September 2024 when Salvadoran chefs in Washington, D.C. created a 20-foot-wide (6.1 m) pupusa. [24] In 2011, The Guardian named pupusas that year's Best Street Food in New York. [25]

  4. Salvadoran cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salvadoran_cuisine

    Salvadorans eat a large variety of seafood. Salvadoran ceviches are made with clams , oysters , fish , shrimp , snails , octopus , squid , and a type of black clam called conchas by locals. Cocktails and ceviches are prepared with a type of tomato and chopped onion sauce or Worcestershire sauce , locally called "Salsa Inglesa" or Salsa Perring ...

  5. El Salvador - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/El_Salvador

    One of El Salvador's notable dishes is the pupusa. Pupusas are handmade maize tortillas (made of masa de maíz or masa de arroz, a maize or rice flour dough used in Latin American cuisine) stuffed with one or more of the following: cheese (usually a soft Salvadoran cheese such as quesillo, similar to mozzarella), chicharrón, or refried beans.

  6. Latin American cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Latin_American_cuisine

    Foods like cornbread are known to have been adopted into the cuisine of the United States from Native American groups. In other cases, documents from the early periods of contact with European, African, and Asian peoples allow the recovery of food practices which passed out of popularity in the historic period (for example, black drink ).

  7. Curtido - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curtido

    Curtido (Spanish pronunciation: [kuɾˈtiðo]) is a type of lightly fermented cabbage relish.It is typical in Salvadoran cuisine and that of other Central American countries, and is usually made with cabbage, onions, carrots, oregano, and sometimes lime juice; it resembles sauerkraut, kimchi, or tart coleslaw.