Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The exact origin of the frito pie is not completely clear. [1] [2]The oldest known recipe using Fritos brand corn chips with chili was published in Texas in 1949. [3] The recipe may have been invented by Daisy Doolin, the mother of Frito Company founder Charles Elmer Doolin and the first person to use Fritos as an ingredient in cooking, or by Mary Livingston, Doolin's executive secretary.
Frito pie is a classic American dish and even served for school lunches in Texas until the mid 1980s. Traditionally it is made with chili, often from a can, shredded cheddar cheese, Fritos in a ...
So break out your slow cooker (or Crock Pot) and enjoy this easy and tasty sweet potato and cranberry casserole side dish. Get the recipe: Slow Cooker Sweet Potato and Cranberry Casserole Spooky ...
Frito pie, a mixture of chili, cheese, and of course, Fritos. We gave the Southwestern comfort food the sheet pan treatment so that our ratio of chili to Fritos was pretty much 1:1—just the way ...
Chili mac is a dish made with canned chili, or roughly the same ingredients as chili (meat, spices, onion, tomato sauce, beans, and sometimes other vegetables), with the addition of macaroni or some other pasta. Chili mac is a standard dish in the U.S. military and is one of the varieties of Meal, Ready-to-Eat (MRE). [29]
Chili mac – American pasta dish; Confit byaldi – Variation of ratatouille; Doria – Japanese dish - Rice baked with béchamel sauce. It is a Japanese Western dish similar to gratin. Fish head casserole – Chinese cuisine; Flying Jacob – Type of casserole from Sweden; French toast casserole; Frito pie – American savory dish
In Mariah Carey's latest song, "Infinity," the diva sings, "Boy, you actin' so corny like Fritos." Funny or Die asked Mimi to decrypt the lyrics in a hilarious spoof - "Cooking with Mariah Carey ...
Some examples of mass-produced Tex-Mex cuisine include canned chili, a hybridized version of Mexican "chile con carne", as well as packaged tortillas, boxes of pre-cooked taco shells, frozen burritos, packages of pre-made guacamole, bottled salsa, and bottled nacho cheese. [10] Many Americans confuse these foods with authentic Mexican foods. [11]