Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Pakora (pronounced [pəˈkɔːɽa]) is a fritter originating from the Indian subcontinent.They are sold by street vendors and served in restaurants across South Asia. [5] They often consist of vegetables such as potatoes and onions, which are coated in seasoned gram flour batter and deep-fried.
A traditional dumpling consisting of fried fish dumplings, usually served with peanut sauce. This appetizer usually served with fried tofu and finger-shaped fried otak-otak fish cakes. Batata vada: India: A popular Indian vegetarian fast food in Maharashtra, India, it literally means "potato fritters". The Marathi word batata means potato in ...
South Korea A fish-shaped pastry stuffed with sweetened red bean paste: Bun kebab: Pakistan (Karachi and elsewhere) A fried patty of ground lentils, chicken or beef, egg batter, and spices, served on a bun with chutney on the side [44] [45] Bunny chow: South Africa [46] A hollowed-out loaf of bread filled with curry [47] [48] Burrito [49 ...
Early versions of apple fritters appear in Martha Washington’s Booke of Cookery, a manuscript dating to the 17th century, which includes various fritter recipes common in colonial American kitchens. [24] An apple fritter recipe typically includes a batter made from flour, sugar, baking powder, salt, milk, eggs, and a bit of oil.
Outside Southern and Western India, such preparations are often known as pakora. Its variations include the chili bajji, potato bajji, onion bajji, plantain bajji and the bread bajji (or bread pakora). Another version is called bonda (in south India), vada (in Maharashtra) and gota (in Gujarat).
Fried fish is any fish or shellfish that has been prepared by frying. Often, the fish is covered in batter, egg and breadcrumbs, flour, or herbs and spices before being fried and served, often with a slice of lemon. Fish is fried in many parts of the world, and fried fish is an important food in many cuisines.
The San peoples were hunter-gatherers, who mostly depended on foods like tortoises, crayfish, coconuts and squash. Agriculture was introduced to South Africa by the Bantu peoples, who continue in the cultivation of grain, starch fruit and root tubers — in the manner of maize, squash and sweet potatoes, following their introduction in the Columbian exchange, displacing the production of many ...
Bokkoms (or bokkems) is whole, salted and dried mullet (more specifically the Southern mullet, Chelon richardsonii, a type of fish commonly known in the Western Cape of South Africa as "harders"), [1] [2] and is a well-known delicacy from the West Coast region of South Africa. This salted fish is dried in the sun and wind and is eaten after ...