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For a diverse but frugal menu of fresh and frozen appetizers, dipping sauces, party platters, treats, and bite-sized snacks, grab some top-rated Costco party food. ... Just throw them in a steamer ...
A hot hors d'oeuvre. The recipes vary, but in general are variations on angels on horseback, made by replacing oysters with dried fruit. The majority of recipes contains a pitted date (though prunes are sometimes used, [10]) stuffed with mango chutney and wrapped in bacon. Eggplant salads and appetizers: Middle East, Arab culture
The term appetiser (American English: appetizer) is a synonym for hors d'oeuvre. It was first used in the United States and England simultaneously in 1860. Americans also use the term to define the first of three courses in a meal, an optional one generally set on the table before guests were seated. [12]
Name Image Description Aceitunas: Olives, sometimes with a filling of anchovies or red bell pepper: Albóndigas: Meatballs with sauce : Aioli "Garlic and oil" is a sauce, the classic ingredients of which are garlic, oil and salt, but the most common form of it includes mayonnaise and garlic, served on bread or with boiled or grilled potatoes, fish, meat or vegetables.
A traditional Betawi and Malay dessert, prepared using pearled sago, sweet potatoes, yams, bananas, coconut milk, pandan leaves, sugar and salt. It can be served hot or cold. Bubur kacang hijau: Nationwide Green beans porridge, sweetened with sugar, and served with thick coconut milk. Bubur ketan hitam: Nationwide
Crostino – an Italian appetizer consisting of small slices of grilled or toasted bread and toppings [10] Egg in the basket – is an egg fried in a hole made in a slice of bread [11] French toast – bread soaked in milk, then in beaten eggs and then fried
Vorschmack or forshmak (Yiddish: פאָרשמאק; from archaic German Vorschmack, "foretaste" [1] or "appetizer" [2]) is an originally East European dish made of salty minced fish or meat. Different variants of this dish are especially common in Ashkenazi Jewish and Finnish cuisine.
The word entrée as a culinary term first appears in print around 1536 in the Petit traicté auquel verrez la maniere de faire cuisine, more widely known from a later edition titled Livre fort excellent de cuisine [b], in a collection of menus [c] at the end of the book.