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Root vegetables are the unsung heroes of the kitchen, offering earthy flavors, hearty textures, and endless versatility. Whether you roast them to caramelized perfection, mash them into creamy ...
This is a list of vegetable dishes, that includes dishes in which the main ingredient or one of the essential ingredients is a vegetable or vegetables. In culinary terms, a vegetable is an edible plant or its part, intended for cooking or eating raw. [1] Many vegetable-based dishes exist throughout the world.
Lalab (Sundanese: ᮜᮜᮘ᮪, Lalab) or lalap/lalapan (Indonesian) is a Sundanese raw vegetable salad served with sambal terasi. It is a popular Sundanese vegetable dish that originated in West Java and Banten, Indonesia. [1] There are no set rules on what vegetables make into lalab; in practice, all edible vegetables can be into lalab.
An extra hot Sundanese sambal associated with the town of Tasikmalaya, made from the mixture of cayenne pepper, garlic, salt and kencur (Kaempferia galanga). [32] Sambal goreng Literally means "fried sambal". It is a mix of crisp fried red shallots, red and green chilli, shrimp paste and salt, briefly stir-fried in coconut oil.
Namul can be seasoned with salt, vinegar, sesame oil and perilla oil, regular soy sauce and soup soy sauce, doenjang (soybean paste), gochujang, and many other spices and condiments. Namul are typically served as banchan ( 반찬 ; a side dish accompanying staples such as rice ).
Cupuaçu butter is closely analogous to cocoa, and is used to make white chocolate. [202] Honesty oil, from the seeds of Lunaria annua, which contain 30–40% oil. The oil is particularly rich in long chain fatty acids, including erucic and nervonic acid, making it suitable for certain industrial purposes. [92] [203]
[2] [3] Basic ingredients in addition to vegetables can include beef, fish, beans and legumes, grains, tofu, noodles and pasta, vegetable broth or stock, milk, cream, water, olive or vegetable oil, seasonings, salt and pepper, among myriad others.
Vegetable oil [11] or canola oil are most common; however, tempura was traditionally cooked using sesame oil. [12] Many specialty shops still use sesame oil or tea seed oil, and it is thought certain compounds in these oils help to produce light, crispier batter. [citation needed] The finished fry is pale whiteish, thin and fluffy, [13] yet ...