Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
1. In a bowl, toss the mangoes, onion and jalapeño with the lime juice. Season with salt and pepper and serve right away.
Meat salad A spicy Thai salad of grilled pork, lemongrass, mint, culantro and shallots, with a dressing of lime juice, sweet chilli paste (nam phrik phao), fish sauce, pounded garlic and bird's eye chili. Pittsburgh salad: Pennsylvania, United States: Vegetable salad Salad with French fries. Piyaz: Turkey: Bean salad
1. In a small bowl, cover the dried shrimp with hot water. Let stand for 5 minutes, then drain. Cut the shrimp into thirds. 2. Using a serrated knife, halve the papaya crosswise and peel the skin.
Although not a salad as it doesn't involve mixing ingredients into a specific dish, the Thai tradition of serving a selection of fresh and boiled greens (often vegetables but also raw tree leaves, steamed mushrooms, or cooked pumpkin) together with a saucer or bowl of nam phrik (Thai chilli paste), fits one of the typical characteristics of a ...
Green mango chutney, [1] also known as raw mango chutney, [2] is an Indian and Pakistan chutney prepared from unripe mangoes. [3] Ripe mangoes are sweet and are not used for chutneys as they are eaten raw. Green unripe mangoes are hard and sour, and they are cooked as chutneys. Mango chutneys are tangy in taste.
Amba or anba (Arabic: عنبة [a], Hebrew: עמבה [b]) is a tangy mango pickle condiment of Baghdadi Jewish origin, and was typically prepared for Shabbat. [1] It is typically made of pickled green mangoes, vinegar, salt, turmeric, chilies, and fenugreek. It is somewhat similar to savoury mango chutneys.
Typical ingredients are Tamagoyaki (Japanese-style omelette), simmered shiitake mushroom, boiled prawn and cucumber. [4] Temaki (手巻き) orTemakizushi (手巻き寿司): Basically the same as makizushi, except that the nori is rolled into a cone-shape with the ingredients placed inside. Sometimes referred to as a "hand-roll".
Major Grey's Mango Chutney is mass-produced by Sun Brand in India [6] [7] [8] and by Desai Brothers Ltd. in Poona, India under the brand name Mother's Recipe, and has been exported to Singapore. [9] Originally all Indian condiments were fiery hot. Hence they were too spicy for the European settlers' palates.