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Zippula (pl.: zippuli; Italian: zeppola or zeppola calabrese) is a fried dough made to a recipe from Calabria, Italy. Zippula is made with flour, water, yeast, boiled potatoes, and a pinch of salt. [1] There are many variations: often anchovies are added, but salt cod, stockfish, cheese, sun-dried tomatoes, olives or 'nduja may also be added. [2]
In Italy and Philly, larger zeppole are often filled with pastry cream. For a take on that version, use a paring knife to poke a small hole in the side of the donut, then fill with pastry cream ...
Zeppole di San Giuseppe. The terms zeppola and sfinge are also used to refer to baked cream puffs made from choux pastry. [4] Some zeppole are filled with ricotta cheese mixed with small pieces of chocolate, candied fruits, and honey. Zeppole can also be savory, and consist of fried bread dough often filled with anchovy.
Literally "snowballs". Dough cut into strips, formed into a ball and fried then covered in toppings; popular in Rothenburg. Sfenj: Morocco, Algeria: Fritter Shakoy: Philippines: Twisted doughnut from the Philippines made with regular flour or rice flour Shuangbaotai: Taiwan: A sweet fried dough food with cavernous holes in the food and a crisp ...
Huevos Rancheros Breakfast Bowls. If you're a savory breakfast fanatic, then you're probably familiar with a huevos rancheros-style meal: refried beans on lightly crisp tortillas, fried eggs ...
Home & Garden. Lighter Side
Unlike many sheet-pan recipes, this one for salmon and asparagus calls for a low oven temperature — just 275 degrees. Cooking it low and slow ensures that the salmon stays moist, but it still ...
Most recipes call for a shallow skillet, but a sheet-pan works just as well. While sweet potatoes roast in the oven, blend up a quick harissa tomato sauce and add it to the sheet-pan.