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A churro (Spanish pronunciation:, Portuguese pronunciation:) is a type of fried dough from Spanish and Portuguese cuisine, made with choux pastry dough piped into hot oil with a piping bag and large closed star tip or similar shape.
Youtiao (traditional Chinese: 油條; simplified Chinese: 油条; pinyin: Yóutiáo), known in Southern China as yu char kway, is a long golden-brown deep-fried strip of wheat flour dough of Chinese origin and (by a variety of other names) also popular in other East and Southeast Asian cuisines.
You’re likely familiar with Mexican-style churros, which are coated in cinnamon sugar and sometimes served with chocolate or dulce de leche for dipping. In other parts of Latin America or the U ...
Vendors selling churros and cueritos (in a spicy sauce) at the Plaza de Toros in Mexico City. Cuerito is pig skin from Mexican cuisine, Venezuelan cuisine and Spanish cuisine. Cuero is the Spanish-language word for skin, leather or hide, so cueritos means "little skins".
Everywhere in Spain people will understand both "churros" and "porras" correctly as churros being the thin and often knotted version and porras being the thicker longer ones. But in many parts of Spain, especially in the south and the Canary Islands if you ask for "churros" you most likely get porras because they are the most popular variation.
Fanesca is a soup traditionally prepared and eaten by households and communities in Ecuador during Holy Week. [1]This is a list of Ecuadorian dishes and foods.The cuisine of Ecuador is diverse, varying with altitude, agricultural conditions, and the ethnic and racial makeup of local communities.
Churros are small sheep with long, thin tails, horizontal ears, [1] and a double coat. Ewes are 40–60 kg (88–132 lb), while rams are 55–85 kg (121–187 lb). The sheep are long-lived and can be productive for up to 15 years. [2] An ideal Churro, according to the breed standard, has a bare face, bare legs, and a mostly bare belly. [12]
A decorated slice of Pastel de tres leches. In Mexico, pastel typically means cake, as in the dessert called Pastel de tres leches.Pastel de tres leches is also served in other Latin American countries, such as Nicaragua, Panama, Cuba, Puerto Rico, Guatemala, and Costa Rica, but the word used to describe it may or may not be "pastel".