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Alu chat (also spelled as alu chaat, aloo chat, or aloo chaat) is a street food originating from the Indian subcontinent, it is popular in North India, West Bengal in Eastern India, Pakistan and also in parts of Sylhet Division of Bangladesh. It is prepared by frying potatoes in oil and adding spices and chutney.
A noodle dish which uses strips of young coconut milk instead of noodles. Panyalam: Fried rice cake made from glutinous rice and coconut milk Piaparan: Meat cooked in coconut milk with spices, shredded coconut, and palapa: Pininyahang hipon: Shrimp cooked in a coconut milk and pineapple-based sauce Pininyahang manok
The most popular varieties are palak pakora, made from spinach, paneer pakora, made from paneer (soft cheese), pyaz pakora, made from onion, and aloo pakora, made from potato. Pakwan: Crisp snacks Palappam: A Nasrani dish of fermented bread made with rice batter and coconut milk, hence the name palappam (meaning milk bread).
Rice cake prepared in clay pot on the streets of the Philippines. They are often topped with butter, muscovado sugar, desiccated coconut, grated cheese and salted duck egg. Boureka: Middle East and Balkans: Baked puff pastry dough or filo dough with any of various fillings such as cheese, spinach, or potatoes [33] [34] Bramborák: Czech Republic
Dough with yeast. Commonly served with feta cheese and/or honey by Albanians and the Albanian diaspora. Picarones: Peru: A sweet, ring-shaped pumpkin-based fritter; often served with a molasses syrup. Pinakufu: Philippines: A dense oval-shaped variant of cascaron from the Philippines made with ground glutinous rice and coconut milk Pirozhki ...
Panipuri is one of the popular chaats in South Asia. Dahi vada chaat with yogurt. The chaat variants are all based on fried dough, with various other ingredients. The original chaat is a mixture of potato pieces, crisp fried bread, dahi vada or dahi bhalla, gram or chickpeas and tangy-salty spices, with sour Indian chili and saunth (dried ginger and tamarind sauce), fresh green coriander ...
"Aloo" means potato, and the word "chap" means a small cutlet fritters or croquette in Bengali. It is served hot and warm along with muri (puffed rice), green chilies, and sometimes sauce and salads. Aloor chop is a Ramadan staple in Bangladesh along with beguni. It is a vegetarian alternative, and an equivalent of aloo tikki. [1]
The original chaat is a mixture of potato , chickpeas, spices, chilli, saunth (dried ginger and tamarind sauce), coriander leaves, and yogurt, but other popular variants include aloo tikkis (garnished with onion, coriander, hot spices and a dash of curd), dahi puri, golgappa, dahi vada and papri chaat. [citation needed]