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Jwipo (Korean: 쥐포) is a traditional Korean pressed fish jerky sold as a street snack. Made from the filefish (in Korean, jwichi [1]), it is seasoned, flattened, and dried. Jwichi meat has a subtle sweet flavor, but jwipo's sweetness comes from added sugar. It is traditionally served hot, heated on a burner until it curls.
Goldfish is a brand of fish-shaped cracker with a small imprint of an eye and a smile manufactured by Pepperidge Farm, which is a division of the Campbell Soup Company. [1] The brand's current marketing and product packaging incorporate this feature of the product: "The Snack That Smiles Back!
The coastal peoples of Kalimantan and Sumatera later developed krupuk made of prawn and fish to make use of leftover sea products. [4] Prawn crackers began to be adopted in foreign countries in the colonial era of the Dutch East Indies around 19th to early 20th century, and are considered as a complement to various Indonesian specialties . [ 1 ]
Keropok lekor (Malay pronunciation: [kəropoʔ lekor]; Jawi: كروڤوق ليكور ) is a traditional Malay fish cracker snack originating from the state of Terengganu, Malaysia. [2] [3] It is made from fish and sago flour and seasoned with salt and sugar.
Bungeo-ppang (Korean: 붕어빵; lit. carp bread) is a fish-shaped pastry stuffed with sweetened red bean paste, which originated from the Japanese taiyaki. [1] One of South Korea's most popular winter street foods, [2] [3] the snack is often sold at street stalls, grilled on an appliance similar to a waffle iron but with a fish-shaped mold.
Chikuwa (竹輪) is a Japanese fishcake product made from fish surimi. [1] After being mixed well, they are wrapped around a bamboo or metal stick and steamed or broiled. The word chikuwa ("bamboo ring") comes from the shape when it is sliced. Variants of surimi products such as kamaboko and satsuma age are popular.
Frutiger Aero visuals in user interface design (KDE Plasma 4 from 2011).Frutiger Aero (/ f r uː t ɪ ɡ ə r ɛ ə r ə ʊ /), sometimes known as Web 2.0 Gloss, [1] is a retrospective name applied to a design trend observed mainly in user interfaces and Internet aesthetics from the mid-2000s to the early 2010s. [2]
Because dried fish and salted fish roe were popular choice for such dishes, over the years the term sakana also came to mean "fish." Another word for "snack" in Japanese is otsumami (お摘み).The Japanese noun tsumami meaning "something to nibble/eat with a drink", which is beautified by adding an honorific prefix o and becoming otsumami.; [3 ...