Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Tortillitas de camarones are shrimp fritters from the province of Cádiz in Andalusia, Spain. They are made with a batter of wheat flour, chickpea flour, water, onion (alternatively shallot or scallion), parsley, shrimp, salt and pepper. The batter is then fried on both sides in a pan with plenty of olive oil. Usually it is served with small ...
It is caught for food from the wild. There has been experimental aquaculture of this species. [3] In Chile, the aquaculture production technology has been developed by the research staff of the Aquaculture Department of the Universidad Católica del Norte, trying to enhance cultivation at commercial level, obtaining a sustainable production in order to decrease the pressure on natural populations.
The term camaron rebosado comes from the Spanish phrase camarón rebozado ("battered shrimp"). Due to the practice of seseo in the Spanish spoken at the time of its introduction, the latter part of the phrase was pronounced as a homophone of rebosado ("bursting"), and was thus rendered into Tagalog as kamaron rebosado. [3]
The beach and the wetlands of Caleta Camarones In 2010, a monumental sculpture celebrating the Chinchorro Culture was inaugurated in the town as part of the bicentennial of the Chilean Republic. The sculpture is four and a half meters tall and weighs eight tons; it is located in the vicinity of the archaeological sites 'Camarones 14 and 15'.
Camarones is the plural Spanish form of camarón, meaning "shrimp", and may refer to several places: Camarones, Chubut, a town in Argentina; Camarones, Chile, a commune in Chile Caleta Camarones, a town in the commune; Camarones, Guaynabo, Puerto Rico, barrio of Puerto Rico; Camarones metro station, a metro station in Mexico City
In Mexican society, pelado is "a term said to have been invented to describe a certain class of urban 'bum' in Mexico in the 1920s." [1] It was used, however, much earlier.. Lewis Garrard used it in his book, "Wah-to-yah and the Taos Trail," his first-hand account of crossing the Plains to Taos, published in 18
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Pages for logged out editors learn more
Playa Camarones (English: "Shrimp Beach") is a beach along Puerto Vallarta's 5 de Diciembre neighborhood, in the Mexican state of Jalisco. [ 1 ] The beach is about "90 feet wide and stretches for 2100 feet from the breakwater in front of Villa Premiere Hotel to the north."