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Caldo de siete mares (in English, "seven seas soup"), also known as caldo de mariscos ("seafood soup") is a Mexican version of fish stew, [1] popular in coastal regions in Mexico. [2] It is typically made with tomato, fish, or seafood broth with local fresh seafood ingredients and, like other Mexican soups, cooked quickly in a thin broth. [2] [3]
Regionally recipes are made in different ways, but most all are a thinner, broth soup. Chupe: Peru: Chowder Thin, milky seafood soup, also referred to as Chupe de Mariscos: Chupe Andino: Andes: Refers to various soups and stews that are prepared in Andes Mountains region of South America Cioppino: San Francisco, California Fish
Caldo tlalpeño Sopa de fideo. Birria; caldo de pollo, chicken soup; caldo de queso, cheese soup; caldo de mariscos, seafood soup; caldo tlalpeño, chicken, broth, chopped avocado, chile chipotle and fried tortilla strips or triangles – may include white cheese, vegetables, chickpeas, carrot, green beans; Fideos (noodles) Menudo; Pozole; Sopa ...
Huachinango a la Veracruzana (Snapper Veracruz style) The cuisine of Veracruz is the regional cooking of Veracruz, a Mexican state along the Gulf of Mexico.Its cooking is characterized by three main influences—indigenous, Spanish, and Afro-Cuban—per its history, which included the arrival of the Spanish and of enslaved people from Africa and the Caribbean.
Sopa marinera — a Spanish seafood dish [3] made with oysters, clams, seashells, crab, lobster, shrimp and spices like achiote and cumin; Sopa de peixe - Portuguese fish soup, usually made using a tomato base. Very rich, it can include a variety of different seafood at the same time, and be a meal in itself. Tom Yum; Ukha
Caldo de mariscos stew, also known as caldo de siete mares; Chepa pulus (tamarind-based South Indian fish stew from Andhra Pradesh) Cioppino (San Francisco version of an Italian fish stew) [2] Cotriade (from Brittany) Fish head curry [3] [4] Ghalieh mahi ; Haemul jeongol ; Halászlé (Hungarian paprika-based river fish soup)
Caldillo de almejas: Clam soup [9] (“caldillo” is a clear thin soup). Chupe de locos: A rich stew made with the loco or Chilean abalone, served with bread and baked in clay pots or “Paila de greda” Sopa de ostras: Oyster soup; Pastel de pescado: Fish pie; Arrollado de chancho and Arrollado de huaso: Pork roll and chilli roll.
Caldo de queso, also known as Sonoran cheese soup, served in central Mexico and southwest United States; Caldo de siete mares ("seven seas soup"), also known as caldo de mariscos ("seafood soup"), commonly served in Mexico; Caldo verde, soup popularly served in Brazil and northern Portugal; Caldo galego, traditional soup dish from Galicia