Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Preparing queso. This recipe include fresh chopped onion, tomatilla, tomatoes, and chili peppers as well as variety of seasoning. Chile con queso is a smooth, creamy sauce, used for dipping, that is made from a blend of melted cheeses (often American cheese, Velveeta or another processed cheese, Monterey Jack or cream cheese), cream, and chili peppers.
Queso flameado (lit. ' flamed cheese ' ), also known as queso fundido or choriqueso , [ 1 ] is a dish of hot melted cheese and spicy chorizo that is often served flambé . Often compared to cheese fondue , it is a party dish; it is popular at cookouts and in restaurants as an appetizer . [ 1 ]
TECHO, also known as Un Techo para mi País (UTPMP) (Spanish for "A Roof For My Country"), is a nonprofit organization that mobilizes youth volunteers to fight extreme poverty in Latin America, by constructing transitional housing and implementing social inclusion programs.
Dulce de leche, known in Chile as manjar Mote con huesillo. Chilean cuisine [1] stems mainly from the combination of traditional Spanish cuisine, Chilean Mapuche culture and local ingredients, with later important influences from other European cuisines, particularly from Germany, the United Kingdom and France. The food tradition and recipes in ...
In Mexico, queso Chihuahua is commonly recognized as a soft white cheese available in braids, balls or rounds and originates in the Mexican state of Chihuahua. In Chihuahua and neighboring states, it is called queso menonita , after the Mennonite communities of Northern Mexico that first produced it, while elsewhere it is called queso Chihuahua .
The mixture is simmered until the tortilla starts softening. Pulled chicken is sometimes added to the mix. It is commonly garnished with crema, crumbled queso fresco, sliced onion, and avocado slices. Chilaquiles can be served with refried beans, eggs (scrambled or fried) and guacamole as side dishes.
In Chile and Bolivia, quesillo refers to a type of small fresh cheese. It is a popular farm cheese of the Cochabamba valley, usually made from raw cow milk, pepsin and acid coagulation, a maize size curd, and a dry-salted, hand-formed, palm-size mold. After resting for two or three hours it has a crumbly consistency and is ready to eat.
Panquehue (Spanish pronunciation:) is a semi-soft Chilean cheese produced in the Andean Aconcagua region. It is one of the most popular cheeses in Chile, it is similar in taste to Tilsit and often has chives or red pepper flakes mixed in. [1] [2] In 2005, it became the first Chilean cheese imported into the United States as part of the free trade agreement.