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' baked sea bream ') is a Japanese fish-shaped cake, commonly sold as street food. It imitates the shape of tai (鯛, red sea bream), which it is named after. [1] The most common filling is red bean paste that is made from sweetened adzuki beans. Other common fillings may be custard, chocolate, cheese, or sweet potato.
Stargazy pie – Cornish dish made of baked fish; Steckerlfisch – Fish grilled on a stick; Stroganina – Siberian dish of sliced raw fish; Sungeoguk – Korean soup dish; Sushi – Japanese dish of vinegared rice and seafood
Rough equivalents are fish paste, fish loaf, fish cake, and fish sausage. [1] Shizuo Tsuji , chef and author, recommends using the Japanese name in English, [1] similar to English usage of the word sushi. Kamaboko has been made in Japan since the 14th century and is now available nearly worldwide.
The Japanese had been making desserts for centuries before sugar was widely available in Japan. Many desserts commonly available in Japan can be traced back hundreds of years. [1] In Japanese cuisine, traditional sweets are known as wagashi, and are made using ingredients such as red bean paste and mochi.
But one of Hoda's recipes—her 2-Ingredient Ponzu Fish—stands above the rest, most likely because of the way it epitomizes the lazy dinner combined with some major Audrey Hepburn elegance. Plus ...
Unagi is served as part of unadon (sometimes spelled unagidon, especially in menus in Japanese restaurants in Western countries), a donburi dish with sliced eel served on a bed of rice. A kind of sweet biscuit called unagi pie made with powdered unagi also exists. [2] Unagi is high in protein, vitamin A, and calcium. [3]
Salt-Baked Fish. Javier Salas. ... Boston Cream Cake Pie. Quick Braised Collards with Pot Liquor. Braised Pork Shoulder with Tomatoes, Cinnamon, and Olives Over Polenta. See all recipes.
Bungeo-ppang was derived from the Japanese treat, taiyaki (baked sea bream), introduced to Korea around the 1930s when the country was under Japanese rule. [5] According to the 2011 book Bungeoppang Has a Family Tree, bungeo-ppang began as a mix of Western waffles and Eastern dumplings, as the taiyaki itself was a Japanese adaptation of Western waffles introduced to Japan in the 18th century.