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  2. Aztec cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aztec_cuisine

    It is a bowl made of porous basalt rock, and an accompanying basalt cylinder was used to grind foods into the molcajete. It looks and functions very similarly to a western mortar and pestle . The fact that a molcajete will hold whatever is prepared in it means it would have been ideal for preparing sauces that would spill off the sides of a ...

  3. List of tortilla-based dishes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_tortilla-based_dishes

    A chimichanga with rice. This is a list of tortilla-based dishes and foods that use the tortilla as a primary ingredient. A tortilla is a type of soft, thin flatbread made from finely ground corn or wheat flour that comes from Mexico and Central America and traditionally cooked on a comal (cookware).

  4. Mold (cooking implement) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mold_(cooking_implement)

    Bundt-style silicone and metal pans (2008) Late 19th- and early 20th-century food molds. A mould (British English) or mold (American English), is a container used in various techniques of food preparation to shape the finished dish. The term may also refer to a finished dish made in said container (e.g. a jello mold). [1]

  5. Tortilla - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tortilla

    A tortilla (/ t ɔːr ˈ t iː ə /, Spanish: [toɾˈtiʝa]) is a thin, circular unleavened flatbread from Mesoamerica originally made from maize hominy meal, and now also from wheat flour. The Aztecs and other Nahuatl speakers called tortillas tlaxcalli ( [t͡ɬaʃˈkalli] ). [ 1 ]

  6. Mortar and pestle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mortar_and_pestle

    The mortar (/ ˈ m ɔːr t ər /) is characteristically a bowl, typically made of hardwood, metal, ceramic, or hard stone such as granite. The pestle (/ ˈ p ɛ s əl /, also US: / ˈ p ɛ s t əl /) is a blunt, club-shaped object. The substance to be ground, which may be wet or dry, is placed in the mortar where the pestle is pounded, pressed ...

  7. Early American molded glass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Early_American_molded_glass

    Designs were cut into the inside walls of all mold parts. Some molds impressed a pattern on the object and base, while others omitted the base. Most molds were in three parts, but could also be constructed of two or four parts. Regardless of the number of parts of a mold, all objects produced in a mold are called three-mold glass. [11]

  8. Tostada (tortilla) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tostada_(tortilla)

    Tostadas (/ t ɒ ˈ s t ɑː d ə / or / t oʊ ˈ s t ɑː d ə /; Spanish:, lit. ' toasted ') are various dishes in Mexican and Guatemalan cuisine based on toasted tortillas. They are generally a flat or bowl-shaped tortilla that is deep-fried or toasted, but may also be any dish using a tostada as a base. [1]

  9. Tortilla press - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tortilla_press

    A tortilla press is a traditional device with a pair of flat round surfaces of about 8-inch plus to crush balls of corn dough in order to obtain round corn tortillas or flour tortillas. Tortillas are pressed out between sheets of plastic or corn leaves. Tortilla presses are usually made of cast iron, cast aluminium or wood. [1]