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  2. Cassava-based dishes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cassava-based_dishes

    In the coastal region, cassava is known especially in the form of bollo de yuca and enyucados. Bollo de yuca is a dough made of ground yuca that is wrapped in aluminum foil and then boiled, and is served with butter and cheese. Enyucado is a dessert made of ground boiled yuca, anise, sugar, and sometimes guava jam.

  3. Salvadoran cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salvadoran_cuisine

    Two other typical Salvadoran dishes are yuca frita and panes rellenos. Yuca frita is deep-fried cassava root served with curtido (a pickled cabbage, onion and carrot topping) and chicharron with pepesca (fried baby sardines). The yuca is sometimes served boiled instead of fried. Panes rellenos ("stuffed bread") are warm submarine sandwiches ...

  4. Dominican Republic cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dominican_Republic_cuisine

    Arroz con dulce – rice pudding made with long-grain rice, milk, sugar, cinnamon, raisins, star anis, clove, and nutmeg. Buñuelos de bacalao – a codfish fritter popular throughout the Caribbean and Latin America. Also known as bacalaíto in the Dominican Republic, a name borrowed from Puerto Rico. Crème caramel – sweet egg custard known ...

  5. Picada (Colombian cuisine) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Picada_(Colombian_cuisine)

    Picada or Picada Colombiana is a Colombian cuisine dish [1] prepared with pieces of steak, chicken, arepa, potato, yuca , morcilla, chorizo, chicharron, carne de cerdo and plantain. The ingredients are usually fried. The word picada means chopped in Spanish. [2]

  6. Chicharrón - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chicharrón

    Chicharrón is made of pork ribs seasoned with garlic, oregano and lemon. It is boiled then cooked in its own fat, adding beer or chicha to the pot for more flavor. Pork chicharrón is normally served only on Sundays and is eaten with llajwa, a tomato salsa, and mote, a type of corn ().

  7. Gordita - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gordita

    The most common and representative variation of this dish is the "gordita de chicharrón", filled with chicharron (a spiced stew of pork rind) which is widely consumed throughout Mexico. Gorditas are often eaten as a lunch dish and accompanied by several types of sauce.

  8. Duros (food) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duros_(food)

    Duros with chili and lemon flavoring Round flour duros puff up when fried.. Duros de harina (also known as pasta para duros, duritos, durros, pasta para durito, chicharrones, churritos, Mexican wagon wheels or pin wheels) are a popular Mexican snack food made of puffed wheat, often flavored with chili and lemon.

  9. Carnitas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carnitas

    Carnitas originate from a traditional French dish that was introduced to Mexico via Spain. According to Mariano Galvan Rivera’s cookbook —Diccionario de cocina (1845)— “carnitas” was the vulgar name given by Mexico’s lower classes to the dish known as “Chicharrones de Tours”, and were specifically made and sold in working class neighborhood slaughterhouses or pork shops: [3]