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Rice burger. Patties are often served as sandwiches, typically in buns, making a type of sandwich called a "burger", or a hamburger if the patty is made from ground beef, or sometimes between slices of bread. [citation needed] An American patty melt is a ground beef patty topped with melted cheese (typically Swiss) served on toasted bread ...
Puff pastry is made using a laminated dough consisting of flour, butter, salt, and water. The pastry rises up due to the water and fats expanding as they turn into steam upon heating. [23] Puff pastry come out of the oven light, flaky, and tender. Choux pastry Choux pastry is a very light pastry that is often filled with cream.
The word pekarnica is used for a bakery that bakes savory products such as bread as well as savory and sweet rolls. In France and Canada, the term pâtisserie also refers to the pastries produced by a pâtissier. Mass-produced pastries are also sometimes called pâtisserie. In Holland, banketbakkerij.
A ring-shaped bread-pastry covered with sesame seeds. Typically consumed as a breakfast or snack dish. [25] Similar to simit. Dutch letter: Netherlands: Typically prepared using flour, eggs and butter or puff pastry as its base and filled with almond paste, dusted with sugar and shaped in an "S" or other letter shape.
A bread for making a sandwich of the same name. Pan dulce: Sweet bread Mexico: A bread that is one of the poster treats in Mexico and other Latin American countries. Panbrioche: Leavened Italy: A bread similar to brioche. Pandesal: Sweet bread Philippines: A rounded bread made of flour, eggs, yeast, sugar, and salt. Pandoro: Yeast bread Italy
Banaue Rice Terraces of Luzon, Philippines, carved into steep mountainsides Taro fields (loʻi) in Hanalei Valley, Kaua'i, Hawaii Paddy field placed under the valley of Madiun, Indonesia Farmers planting rice in Cambodia. A paddy field is a flooded field of arable land used for growing semiaquatic crops, most notably rice and taro.
Puff pastry and phyllo (alternatively spelled “filo” or “fillo” and often referred to as ”phyllo dough” on store-bought packages) are both doughs that can be used in sweet and savory ...
Bread is also made from the flour of other wheat species (including spelt, emmer, einkorn and kamut). [17] Non-wheat cereals including rye, barley, maize (corn), oats, sorghum, millet and rice have been used to make bread, but, with the exception of rye, usually in combination with wheat flour as they have less gluten. [18]