enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Polvorosas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polvorosas

    Polvorosas (Spanish pronunciation: [polβoɾosas]) are traditional Venezuelan and Colombian cookies. They are often made with flour, cornstarch, sugar, milk, and butter (or lard). The word stems from "pólvora," meaning particles that are reduced to one solid thing, in other words, dust.

  3. Venezuelan cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Venezuelan_cuisine

    Venezuelan dessert called quesillo. Alfajor – maize cookie with arequipe and grated coconut; Bienmesabe; Brazo gitano (the Spanish Swiss roll) Conserva de guayaba – Guava confection; Chupichupi – a water-based frozen snack in a plastic tube, a freezie; Dulce de lechosa – Green papaya slowed cooked in a syrup flavored with cinnamon ...

  4. Taste of the tropics: Bululu offers Venezuelan cuisine and ...

    www.aol.com/taste-tropics-bululu-offers...

    Yully Ortega was inspired to open an ice cream shop like the ones in her native Venezuela, ... Expect to pay about $10 to $15 for a nice portion of traditional Venezuelan cuisine, and lunch ...

  5. Pastel de chucho - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pastel_de_chucho

    Pastel de chucho (English: Stingray pie; see "chucho") is a delicacy made of stingrays, common in Eastern Venezuela and Margarita. The creole dish is described as "gourmet". [1] [2] The dish is traditional food in the South American country of Venezuela, and a very common dish in Eastern coastal areas. Its popularity may be attributed to how it ...

  6. What's Cooking: Venezuelan food served in Ambridge; Rita's ...

    www.aol.com/whats-cooking-venezuelan-food-served...

    Tequenos (Venezuelan cheese wrapped with dough and deep fried), $8.99 for six pieces. Two empanadas (white corn patty stuffed with your choice of beef, cheese or chicken then deep fried), $8.99.

  7. Hallaca - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hallaca

    Hallaca (Spanish pronunciation:, [1]) is a traditional Venezuelan dish.See in the photo, two hallacas with some slides of Pan de Jamón. The photo is unreal cause the hallacas have to be opened before the pan de jamón was added.

  8. Venezuelan baked goods available at 1 farmers' market ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/venezuelan-baked-goods-available-1...

    While the Tuesday and Owen County farmers' markets prepare to close at the end of September, another adds a booth with Venezuelan baked goods. Venezuelan baked goods available at 1 farmers' market ...

  9. Tres leches cake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tres_leches_cake

    Recipes for soaked-cake desserts were seen in some Latin American countries as early as the 19th century, in countries like El Salvador, likely a result of the large cross-cultural transfer which took place between Europe and the Americas. [12] Nicaragua is one of the countries where tres leches cake has become popular. [13]