irish stew - Glossary Search
Top 9 glossary terms found
Displaying 1-9
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Term Name |
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A type of stew originating in Ireland that is made with lamb or mutton, potatoes, onions, and seasonings.
A stewing method used when the natural flavor from all the ingredients is desired rather than the flavor from the browning of the meat.
Chunks of meat that are used as an ingredient for a dish containing stewed meat and vegetables. Fresh stew meat is usually taken from the tougher cuts of beef, pork, or lamb because the stewing process tenderizes the meat.
A hearty Italian seafood stew that is generally created from the bits of fish remaining after the daily catches are sent to market.
A milk-based soup referred to as a stew that is basically a broth with cooked oysters. Very light in texture, Oyster Stew typically contains butter, water, milk, and cooked oysters combined with seasonings.
A mixture of meat, poultry, or fish chunks, vegetables, herbs, spices, and liquid, such as water or stock, which are cooked together slowly at a low temperature in a covered pot.
A type of thick stew containing whatever ingredients happen to be on hand when making it. Ingredients generally include meat, potatoes and a mixture of any type of vegetable that is available at the time.
A food dish that combines beef with a variety of other ingredients, such as potatoes, vegetables, herbs, spices, and broth to create a savory dish, rich in flavor and often served as the main dish.
1. A soft, creamy mixture of ingredients that may include eggs, black molasses, brown sugar, citron, sour cream, raisins, apples, figs, suet, flour, and other ingredients that are combined and steamed to create a pudding served traditionally in the southern United States.
Top 9 glossary terms found
Displaying 1-9