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  2. Umeboshi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Umeboshi

    Umeboshi are often eaten as snacks; in the United States and Australia, many Japanese grocery stores stock them. Eating umeboshi in Japan is the equivalent of the English expression "an apple a day". [7] Children's candy shops sometimes carry karikari ume, or prepackaged, crunchy pickled ume, and dried umeboshi.

  3. Li hing mui - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Li_hing_mui

    Li hung mui is called hoshiume (Japanese: 干し梅, dried plum) in Japan, where the salty and sour umeboshi is also popular. Li hing mui, along with li hing powder, is extremely popular as a snack in Hawaii .

  4. Prunus mume - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prunus_mume

    Umeboshi are also used as a popular filling for rice balls (onigiri) wrapped in nori. Makizushi made with plums may be made with either umeboshi or bainiku (umeboshi paste), often in conjunction with green shiso leaves. A byproduct of umeboshi production is umeboshi vinegar, a salty, sour condiment. [citation needed]

  5. Saladitos - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saladitos

    Saladitos are a Mexican snack of dried and salted plums or apricot, which can also be sweetened with sugar and anise or coated in chili and lime.A common misconception is that saladitos and chamoy are the same thing; saladitos are the dried salted fruit, whereas chamoy is made from the leftover brine.

  6. Kiamoy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kiamoy

    They are sold covered in a powdery coating of an anise (sometimes licorice), li hing (red powder made from plum seeds), salt, and sugar mixture called "kiamoy powder" or kiam-muy-hoon (Hokkien Chinese: 鹹梅 粉; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: kiâm-muî hún; lit. 'salted plum powder'). They are characteristically bright red, orange, or light brown in color.

  7. Chamoy (sauce) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chamoy_(sauce)

    The third hypothesis is via the Japanese umeboshi. The term "chamoy", in this case, was supposedly coined by Teikichi Iwadare, a Japanese immigrant to Mexico who produced umeboshi made with apricot in the 1950s, [7] [8] which he allegedly called "chamoy" from Chinese suan mei ("sour plum") or Vietnamese xí muôi ("preserved prune"). However ...

  8. Choya Umeshu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Choya_Umeshu

    Choya Umeshu Co., Ltd. (チョーヤ梅酒株式会社, Chōya Umeshu Kabushiki-gaisha), or Choya, is a Japanese company headquartered in Habikino, Osaka, Japan, which specializes in the production and sales of umeshu plum liqueur. Its other main businesses include brandy, sake, wine, and foods.

  9. Plum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plum

    The Japanese variety, called umeboshi, is often used for rice balls, called onigiri or omusubi. The ume, from which umeboshi are made, is more closely related, however, to the apricot than to the plum. In the Balkans, plum is converted into an alcoholic drink named slivovitz (plum brandy, called in Bosnian, Croatian, Montenegrin or Serbian ...

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