Adzuki Beans
A small, deep-red East Asian legume sweetened into a paste (*anko*) that fills mochi, daifuku, and dorayaki — and the secret sweet ingredient in Japanese desserts everywhere.
Foods with exactly 11 letters that contain E — full profile for each.
You're looking for 11-letter foods containing E — here are 17 matches, each linked to a full profile.
A small, deep-red East Asian legume sweetened into a paste (*anko*) that fills mochi, daifuku, and dorayaki — and the secret sweet ingredient in Japanese desserts everywhere.
A small brick-red seed from a tropical American shrub — the source of bright orange-red food coloring in cheddar cheese, chorizo, and Filipino kare-kare, with a mild peppery-nutty flavor.
A moist quick-bread sweetened mostly by overripe bananas — a Depression-era American baking staple now made worldwide.
A British dessert invention of the 1970s — a buttery biscuit base topped with toffee made from condensed milk, fresh banana slices, and whipped cream; the name combines banana and toffee; first made at The Hungry Monk restaurant in East Sussex in 1972, and now one of the most popular British desserts both at home and in cafes worldwide.
The classic French custard dessert with a burnt caramel top — a rich, silky vanilla-infused cream set to a barely trembling consistency, covered with a thin layer of caster sugar that is caramelised under a grill or with a blowtorch to form a brittle, shattering golden disc; the moment of cracking the caramel top with a spoon is one of the small pleasures of restaurant dining.
Stale bread soaked in egg and milk, then pan-fried to a golden crust — called *pain perdu* (lost bread) in France because it rescues bread past its prime; topped with maple syrup, fruit, or icing sugar.
One of the world's oldest spiced baked goods — a broad category ranging from soft, dark, treacle-rich cake to firm, dry biscuit, all sharing the defining flavour of dried ginger and warm spices; gingerbread men, gingerbread houses, and gingerbread cake are all distinct products sharing a name but differing entirely in texture and use; associated with Christmas, medieval fairs, and warming winter baking throughout Europe.
Cheese made from goat's milk — distinctly tangy, often soft and chalky-white, used fresh, aged, or melted into salads and savory tarts.
One of French cuisine's five mother sauces — a warm emulsion of egg yolks and butter flavoured with lemon, served over eggs Benedict, asparagus, and fish.
A dark vinegar made from fermented malted barley — the signature condiment for British fish and chips, with distinctive caramel-malty flavor that distinguishes it from grape, rice, or apple-based vinegars.
A bumpy, green-skinned Australian pear variety with sweet, buttery white flesh — one of the most commercially important pear cultivars grown in the Southern Hemisphere and a familiar supermarket staple worldwide.
A Provencal vegetable stew of tomato, eggplant, zucchini, peppers, and onions stewed slowly in olive oil with herbs — peasant food turned French classic.
Tiny oil-rich seeds from one of the world's oldest oilseed crops — toasted, sprinkled, ground into tahini, pressed for oil, or scattered across breads and sweets globally.
A classic British steamed suet pudding studded with currants or raisins — the "spots" are the dried fruit, and "dick" is thought to derive from an old dialect word for dough or pudding; rich, dense, and warming, it is served hot with custard and remains a staple of British school dinners, pub menus, and traditional restaurant pudding lists.
A soft, spreadable fat product blended for easy spreading directly from the refrigerator — a broad category covering butter blends, margarine, and dairy-free alternatives formulated specifically for the breakfast table.
A quintessentially British tart of golden syrup mixed with breadcrumbs and lemon juice in a short pastry shell — intensely sweet, with a distinctive butterscotch flavour and a slightly sticky, set filling; one of the oldest surviving British puddings, and Harry Potter's favourite food.
An Australian common name for yellow-fleshed pawpaw / papaya — used distinctly from "red papaw" in Australian markets to indicate the milder, less-perfumed variety.
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