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Maithil cuisine comprises a broad repertoire of rice, wheat, fish and meat dishes and the use of various spices, herbs and natural edibles. [3] The cuisine is categorized by types of food for various events, from banquets, to weddings and parties, festival foods, and travel foods.
[9] [10] Early known recipes come from Manasollasa (1130 CE) cookbook which mentions "Parika" (pakoda) and the method of preparing it with vegetables and gram flour. [11] Lokopakara (1025 CE) cookbook also mentions unique pakora recipe where gram flour is pressed into fish-shaped moulds and fried in mustard oil. [12]
Dutch fish fried in batter, often served with fried potatoes Ikan goreng: An Indonesia and Malaysian dish of seasoned and deep fried fish. Usually served with sambal chili paste or kecap manis (sweet soy sauce). Popular fish being fried e.g. gourami, carp, milkfish, and red snapper. Machh bhaja: Machh bhaja is fish fried in mustard
A Golden Mustard Fish Curry. Ilish or Chingri Bhape: Curry. Ilish (Hilsha fish) or prawn, coconut, mustard, steamed. Traditional Bengali Dish. Kabiraji: A popular non-vegetarian Indian dish in eastern India prepared using chicken and fish: Kharoli: Pickle made from mustard; an Assamese specialty: Khorisa: Pickle made from bamboo shoot; an ...
Beer Battered Fish. This recipe calls for thick filets of cod, but any white fish filet (like haddock, halibut, hake, or pollock) will work. Either way, it'll be tender and flaky on the inside and ...
Although the saveloy was traditionally made from pig brains, the ingredients of a shop-bought sausage are typically pork (58%), water, rusk, pork fat, potato starch, salt, emulsifiers (tetrasodium diphosphate, disodium diphosphate), white pepper, spices, dried sage, preservatives (sodium nitrite, potassium nitrate), and beef collagen casing.
Variations can depend on what type of fish is used; how finely chopped the fish is; the use of milk or water; the use of flour or boiled potatoes; the use of eggs, egg whites, or no eggs; the cooking method (boiling, frying, or baking); and the inclusion of other ingredients (for example, shrimp, bacon, herbs, or spices).
Kasundi is a mustard sauce made by fermenting mustard seeds, and is much stronger and sharper than other kinds of mustard sauce. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] It is highly pungent, and is capable of exciting the nasal passage and bringing tears to the eyes in the same way as wasabi .