spinach - Glossary Search
Top 82 glossary terms found
⋅
⋅
⋅
⋅
⋅
⋅
⋅
⋅
⋅
⋅
⋅
⋅
⋅
⋅
⋅
⋅
⋅
⋅
⋅
⋅
⋅
⋅
⋅
⋅
⋅
⋅
 |
 |
 |
Term Name |
 |
 |
A leafy green vegetable or salad green with a flavor that is slightly bitter tasting, derived from the oxalic acid contained in spinach.
A type of broad-leafed Spinach that is grown in Far Eastern countries to harvest the shoots and leaves of the plant.
A broad-leafed variety of spinach that is grown in Far Eastern countries for the shoots and leaves of the plant.
A leafy green vegetable with a flavor that is slightly bitter tasting. There are different varieties of spinach, which vary in the type of leaves they have, from smooth to very crinkled.
A Greek dish that may be referred to as a spinach pie, which is very similar to a quiche however, with more spinach and fewer eggs.
Very common in India and Italian dishes, this type of sauce is used as a base for cooking and flavoring dishes with poultry, vegetables, legumes, and pasta.
An herb that is technically not a grain, but is often used like a grain because of its abundance of grain like seeds.
A ribbon pasta made from pasta dough that has had finely chopped spinach added to it when the dough was made.
A rippled or smooth-leafed vegetable that has a white, red or yellow stalk with white veins running throughout the stalks.
A root vegetable grown for the leaves that are used as cooking greens (beet greens) and the firm textured bulbous root, which is served as a cooked vegetable.
A fried food that is common in the middle eastern countries such as India. Known as a fritter in the U.S., a Pakora may be formed as a small round patty or simply take the shape of the combined ingredients, becoming irregularly-shaped if small strands of vegetables are added to the contents.
Most notably known as "Sauvignon Blanc". Pronounced so-veen-yawn blahngk. A grape varietal used in the production of white wine.
Most notably known as "Sauvignon Blanc". A grape varietal used in the production of white wine. Thought to have originated in the Loire and Bordeaux regions of France, it is also grown in the United States (primarily California), Italy, Australia, South America, Argentina, and Chile.
A grape varietal used in the production of white wine. Thought to have originated in the Loire and Bordeaux regions of France, it is also grown in the United States (primarily California), Italy, Australia, South America, Argentina, and Chile.
Pronounced so-veen-yawn blahngk. A grape varietal used in the production of white wine. Thought to have originated in the Loire and Bordeaux regions of France, it is also grown in the United States (primarily California), Italy, Australia, South America, Argentina, and Chile.
A rippled leaf vegetable with a white or red stalk and green leaves that have white veins running throughout the stalk.
Cooking greens from the mustard plant that are grown in both red and green varieties. This green provides a peppery flavor to assorted cooked dishes or when eaten raw.
The Italian word for "soup". Zuppa specifically refers to a type of soup for which the main ingredients are vegetables common to the country.
An emulsion sauce made with mayonnaise as the base that is colored green with various other ingredients.
Green salad leaves that cannot be classified as a true herb or vegetable, which are native to the Mediterranean and eastern Asia.
Top 82 glossary terms found