Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Ficus pumila var. awkeotsang, also known as the jelly fig, aiyu, or ai-yu, is a variety of Ficus pumila, and a member of the fig family Moraceae, native to Taiwan. [1] The plant is known for its use in making aiyu jelly .
Aiyu jelly (Chinese: 愛玉冰; pinyin: àiyùbīng; or 愛玉凍; àiyùdòng; or simply 愛玉; àiyù), known in Amoy Hokkien as ogio (Chinese: 薁蕘; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: ò-giô), [1] and as ice jelly in Singapore (Chinese: 文 頭 雪; pinyin: wéntóu xuě), is a jelly made from the gel from the seeds of the awkeotsang creeping fig found in Taiwan and East Asian countries of the same ...
Blackberry Cobbler. Fruit desserts for the win! This seasonal treat is chock-full of juicy blackberries baked into a tender cakey base. When paired with a scoop of vanilla ice cream, it's the ...
They're beloved by all ages, easy to make, and even better when served with a cold glass of milk. "I never met a homemade cookie I didn't like," Ree Drummond says.
The Pioneer Woman knows her way around steak. So it should go without saying that she makes a marinade that will make every meat lover swoon. It'll be the best ten minutes you've spent in the ...
Ice jelly may refer to: Aiyu jelly, a Taiwanese dessert; Bingfen, a dessert in Southwest China This page was last edited on 27 July 2021, at 22:22 (UTC). Text is ...
Recipes and Tips To Remember. Inside the cover page, I find the words scrawled: “cole slaw, page 217.” When I flip open the book, it falls easily to that page, as if the past owner frequented ...
A bowl of grass jelly from a Chinese restaurant in Yuen Long. Grass jelly is a gelatinous dessert that is usually made from a plant in the mint family called Platostoma palustre. It and similar desserts can be made from other grass jelly plants. [1] Some are also used for making beverages. [2]