Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Catalan cuisine relies heavily on ingredients popular along the Mediterranean coast, including fresh vegetables (especially tomato, garlic, eggplant (aubergine), capsicum, and artichoke), wheat products (bread, pasta), Arbequina olive oils, wines, legumes (beans, chickpeas), mushrooms (particularly wild mushrooms), nuts (pine nuts, hazelnuts and almonds), all sorts of pork preparations ...
A bowl of escudella with pasta. Escudella i carn d'olla, or shorter escudella (Eastern Calatan: [əskuˈðeʎə]; lit. ' bowl '), is a traditional Catalan and Valencian soup made with meat and vegetables. [1]
Xató (Catalan pronunciation:) is a typical Catalan dish. It is a sauce made with almonds, hazelnuts, breadcrumbs, vinegar, garlic, olive oil, salt, and the nyora pepper. The sauce is often served with an endive salad prepared with anchovy, tuna and dried and salted cod (bacallà).
Catalan cuisine appears in its finest form here, with house specials of herby snails, garlicky squid and juicy legs of duck. ... The traditional time to “fer el vermut” was late morning or ...
Pa amb tomàquet (Catalan pronunciation: [ˈpa m tuˈmakət]); also known as pan con tomate (both meaning "bread with tomato") outside of Catalonia, is a traditional food of Catalan, Aragonese and Balearic cuisine. Pa amb tomàquet is considered a staple of Catalan cuisine and identity.
[8] The coca is a dish common to rich and poor [9] and a basic part of Catalan cuisine. In Catalonia, the coca has a direct relationship with the festa or holiday. [10] It is typical to buy or prepare cocas during holidays, especially during Easter (Pasqua), Christmas (Nadal) and Saint John's Eve (la revetlla de Sant Joan).
a type of sausage and one of the most important dishes of the Catalan cuisine. Botillo: Province of León: meat is a dish of meat-stuffed pork intestine. It is a culinary specialty of El Bierzo, a northern county in the Spanish province of León. Cecina: Castilian-Leonese cuisine Province of León: meat
Botifarra (Spanish: butifarra; French: boutifarre) is a type of sausage and one of the most important dishes of the Catalan cuisine. Botifarra is based on ancient recipes, either the Roman sausage botulu or the lucanica, made of raw pork and spices, with variants today in Italy and in the Portuguese and Brazilian linguiça. [citation needed]