enow.com Web Search

  1. Including results for

    women who made macau sauce

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Tao Huabi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tao_Huabi

    Tao Huabi (Chinese: 陶华碧; born January 1947) is a Chinese entrepreneur, best known as the founder of the chili sauce brand Lao Gan Ma ("Old Godmother"). [1] [2] [3] Tao is a member of the Chinese Communist Party and a National People's Congress deputy. [3]

  3. Minchee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minchee

    Macau's food has a fusion of Cantonese, Portuguese, South America, Malay, Africa, and India. [1] While recipes vary, the dish is generally based on minced or ground meat. It is made with beef or pork with onions, cubed potatoes, and sometimes mushrooms, slightly stir-fried, and flavoured with Worcestershire sauce, molasses and soy sauce.

  4. Lao Gan Ma - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lao_Gan_Ma

    Lao Gan Ma (Chinese: 老干妈; also called Laoganma) or Old Godmother is a brand of chili sauces made in China. [1] [2] The product is sold in China and over 30 other countries. [2] Lao Gan Ma is credited with popularizing Chinese chili oil and chili crisp toppings in the Western world, and have inspired many Chinese-American chili-based ...

  5. The Woman Who Made Us All Italian - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/woman-made-us-italian...

    $25.99 at amazon.com. By high school, I started to cook with tentative ambition. When I bragged to my aunt that I made my own sauce with canned tomatoes, onion, and lots of garlic and olive oil ...

  6. What it’s really like to live in Macao

    www.aol.com/really-live-macao-012149611.html

    Science & Tech. Shopping. Sports

  7. Macanese cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macanese_cuisine

    Macanese cuisine (Chinese: 澳門土生葡菜, Portuguese: culinária macaense) is mainly influenced by Chinese cuisine, especially Cantonese cuisine and European cuisine, especially Portuguese cuisine and influences from Southeast Asia and the Lusophone world, due to Macau's past as a Portuguese colony and long history of being an international tourist gambling centre.

  8. Lee Kum Kee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lee_Kum_Kee

    In 1888, he formed the Lee Kum Kee company to market his version of oyster sauce, a staple sauce, seasoning and condiment in Cantonese and southern Chinese cuisine. It continues to be run as a family business by the Lee family. From 1902 to 1932, the company's office was located in Macau and in 1932 it moved to its newest headquarters in Hong Kong.

  9. List of Chinese sauces - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Chinese_sauces

    Shacha sauce (沙茶酱) – A sauce or paste that is used as a base for soups, hotpot, as a rub, stir fry seasoning and as a component for dipping sauces. Cha Shao sauce (叉烧酱, Cantonese: Char Siu) Plum sauce (苏梅酱) Fish sauce (鱼露) Doubanjiang, the mother sauce of Sichuan cuisine Laoganma, a popular sauce in China. Oil, chili ...