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Choripán (plural: choripanes) is a type of asado sandwich with grilled chorizo.It is popular in Argentina, Chile, Uruguay, Paraguay, Peru, Ecuador, Bolivia and Venezuela.The name comes from the combination of the names of its ingredients: a grilled chorizo sausage and a crusty bread (Spanish: pan) such as a pan batido, baguette, or francés.
A bread clip is a device that is used to hold plastic bags closed, such as those in which sliced bread is commonly packaged. They are also commonly called bread tags , bread tabs , bread ties , bread buckles , or bread-bag clips .
The name comes from the Spanish empanar (to bread, i.e., to coat with bread), [1] [2] and translates as 'breaded', that is, wrapped or coated in bread. They are made by folding dough over a filling, which may consist of meat, cheese, tomato, corn, or other ingredients, and then cooking the resulting turnover, either by baking or frying.
A lame (/ l æ m, l eɪ m /, from French lame, inherited from Latin lāmina, meaning saw) is a double-sided blade that is used to slash the tops of bread loaves in baking. A lame is used to score (also called slashing or docking ) bread just before the bread is placed in the oven.
Banana bread – Cake made from mashed bananas; Bannock – Type of flat quick bread – British and Irish variety of flat quick bread or any large, round article baked or cooked from grain; Bannock – Type of bread – Indigenous American bread; Beaten biscuit – Type of biscuit; Beer bread – Bread baked with beer in the dough
comic books and cartoons The Walt Disney Company: Typically used to refer to comic books and cartoons in Greece. [citation needed] Miojo instant noodles: Myojo Foods (as of 2007, subsidiary of Nissin foods) Commonly used in Brazil to describe any instant noodles, first commercialized in said country by Myojo Foods in 1965. [155] [156] [157] Muzak
It's a classic tale: You have last-minute guests coming over for dinner or a bake sale fundraiser you didn't find out about until the night before—and now you need to concoct some tasty treats ...
Nutribun, also referred to as Nutri-bun or Nutriban, is a bread product used in elementary school feeding programs in the Philippines to combat child malnutrition, [1] initially as part of the United States Agency for International Development (USAID)'s Food for Peace program from 1971 to 1997, [2] [3] and later as part of the child health programs of various Philippine cities.