Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Curacha Alavar, sometimes referred to as curacha con salsa Alavar ("Curacha with Alavar sauce") in Chavacano a Spanish-based creole language, is a Filipino dish made from spanner crabs (), garlic, ginger, salt, and Alavar sauce.
Calamansi is used in its partly ripe stage with soy sauce, vinegar, and/or siling labuyo as part of the most ubiquitous dipping sauce in Filipino cuisine, like in siomai. Achuete (Annatto oil) - annatto seeds fried in oil which typically turn dishes a bright orange; Asín tibuok; Biasong or samuyao (small-fruited papeda) Kamias (bilimbi ...
Like the stew version, it is also usually eaten paired with white rice or is commonly used as stuffing, like for Filipino empanadas. [23] [19] [20] When served with white rice, sunny-side up eggs, and fried saba bananas, it becomes the Filipino version of the dish arroz a la cubana.
A tempura-like Filipino street food of duck or quail eggs covered in an orange-dyed batter and then deep-fried. Tokneneng uses duck eggs while the smaller kwek kwek use quail eggs. Tokwa at baboy: A bean curd (tokwa is Filipino for tofu, from Lan-nang) and pork dish. Usually serving as an appetizer or for pulutan. Also served with Lugaw.
Ají is a spicy sauce that contains ají peppers, oil, tomatoes, cilantro (coriander), garlic, onions, and water.It is served as a condiment to complement main dishes, most oftentimes in Latin American cuisines, and prepared by blending its ingredients using a food processor or blender.
Salsa criolla is often associated with Peruvian cuisine, but also found in Cuban, Puerto Rican, [2] Nicaraguan, Uruguayan, and Argentinian cuisine. [3] In Peru, salsa criolla is a cold sauce typically used to accompany meat. The base composition is onion, red bell pepper and tomato, lime juice or vinegar and oil.
Pescado a la chorrillana: Fried fish in a tomato, onion, and white wine salsa. Pescado a la trujillana : Steamed fish with an egg and onion sauce. Pescado a lo macho : Fried fish in a shellfish sauce with aji (hot pepper) and garlic.
Sauce is a French word probably from the post-classical Latin salsa, derived from the classical salsus 'salted'. [1] Possibly the oldest recorded European sauce is garum, the fish sauce used by the Ancient Romans, while doubanjiang, the Chinese soy bean paste is mentioned in Rites of Zhou 20. Sauces need a liquid component. Sauces are an ...