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  2. Arepa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arepa

    It can be grilled, baked, fried, boiled, or steamed. The characteristics vary by color, flavor, size, and the food with which it may be stuffed, depending on the region. Simple arepas are filled with butter or cheese and baked. Depending on the meal, more filling varieties can be added with combinations of ingredients like beans, meat, avocados ...

  3. How to Make Arepas - AOL

    www.aol.com/arepas-203053213.html

    In Venezuela, arepas are stuffed with all kinds of meats and vegetables. Chef Lis Hernandez show us how to make arepas with avocado chicken salad, or reina pepiada arepas. The post How to Make ...

  4. Learn How to Make Franco Noriega's Arepas With a Twist: Recipe

    www.aol.com/entertainment/learn-franco-noriegas...

    Twist on Tradition. Ingredients. 1 ¼ cups water. 1 cup P.A.N. fine cornmeal. 2 tbsp olive oil. 1 tsp kosher salt and pepper. 4 oz Mexican chorizo, casing removed

  5. Talk:Arepa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Arepa

    This article, written in Spanish, discusses the food shortages in Venezuela and discusses the effect that the shortages are having on corn flour consumption per capita. Arepas are made of corn flour, and the article discusses how arepas are being eaten less and less. Bernal, Mateo M. Arepa, sabor y tradición del campo. December 18, 2016.

  6. Venezuelan cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Venezuelan_cuisine

    Served as snacks by street vendors; can also be eaten as a full meal. The dough is made with corn flour, similar to arepas, and the fillings are typically cheese, stewed black beans, shredded beefs, among others Pastelitos: Same as empanada but made from wheat. Common in the Venezuelan Andes region.

  7. Chilean cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chilean_cuisine

    With the arrival of the Spanish conquerors led by Pedro de Valdivia in 1540 came some of the products that would become staples of Chilean cuisine—wheat, pigs, sheep, cattle, chickens and wine—while the native peoples contributed potatoes, maize, beans, and seafood.

  8. Cachapa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cachapa

    Like arepas, they are popular at roadside stands. They can be made like pancakes of fresh corn dough, [ 1 ] or wrapped in dry corn leaves and boiled ( cachapa de hoja ). The most common varieties are made with fresh ground corn mixed into a thick batter and cooked on a budare , like pancakes; the cachapa is slightly thicker and lumpier because ...

  9. How to Make Arepas - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/arepas-203053213.html

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