FOODS

2-syllable Foods that contain D

Foods pronounced in 2 syllables that contain D — full profile for each.

You're looking for 2-syllable foods containing D — here are 21 matches, each linked to a full profile.

List of 2-syllable Foods that contain D

    1

    Almonds

    The seed of a small Mediterranean tree related to peaches and apricots, eaten raw, roasted, in baking, and processed into milk, flour, oil, and the famous Sicilian marzipan.

    2

    Custard

    The great British pouring sauce and dessert base — custard ranges from thin, pourable sauce through thick pastry cream to firm set dessert; in Britain, "custard" usually means the warm, pourable vanilla sauce poured generously over pies, crumbles, and puddings; made either from eggs and cream (real custard) or from custard powder and milk (the British standby invented by Alfred Bird in 1837 for his egg-allergic wife).

    3

    Dango

    Japanese chewy rice-flour dumplings skewered three to five on a bamboo stick — a simple sweet or savoury snack eaten at festivals and with green tea, in dozens of seasonal varieties.

    4

    Dim Sum

    A Cantonese tradition of small steamed and fried bites served from rolling carts at brunch — dumplings, buns, rolls, and savory plates picked piece by piece with tea.

    5

    Donut

    A deep-fried sweet ring or filled round of dough, the favorite quick-bread sweet of North America and a global breakfast and snack staple.

    6

    Dumpling

    A pocket of dough wrapped around a filling — boiled, steamed, fried, or baked — found in nearly every cuisine on Earth.

    7

    Flatbread

    The world's oldest and most universal bread — unleavened or minimally leavened dough cooked quickly on a hot surface, spanning from lavash to roti to pita; the bread that preceded the oven.

    8

    Fondue

    Swiss melted cheese in a communal pot — Gruyère and Emmental melted with white wine and Kirsch, kept warm over a flame; bread cubes dipped on long forks, with the legend that dropping your bread means a round of drinks.

    9

    Hot Dog

    A grilled or steamed sausage served in a long sliced bun — a Frankfurt-Vienna sausage tradition transformed into a defining American street food.

    10

    Idli

    South Indian steamed rice-and-lentil cakes — made from a fermented batter of soaked rice and black lentils, steamed in round moulds to produce light, spongy, protein-rich cakes eaten for breakfast with sambar and chutneys.

    11

    Mulled Wine

    Warm spiced red wine — the definitive drink of European Christmas markets and winter celebrations, made by simmering wine with cinnamon, cloves, star anise, orange peel, and sugar until fragrant and warming; known as Glühwein in Germany, vin chaud in France, and glogg in Scandinavia.

    12

    Mustard

    A sharp condiment made from ground mustard seeds, vinegar, and water — one of the world's oldest cultivated spices, with regional traditions ranging from yellow American hot dog mustard to coarse French moutarde to fiery English variants.

    13

    Pad Thai

    Thailand's national noodle dish — rice noodles stir-fried with egg, bean sprouts, and choice of protein in a tangy-sweet tamarind sauce, finished with crushed peanuts, chilli flakes, and a squeeze of lime.

    14

    Porridge

    Oats cooked in water or milk until creamy and thick — one of humanity's oldest foods and Britain's most sustaining breakfast, eaten across the whole country but with particular cultural importance in Scotland where it was historically made with salt and eaten standing up; now topped with everything from honey to whisky.

    15

    Pulled Pork

    Slow-smoked pork shoulder cooked for 12–18 hours at low temperature until the collagen breaks down and the meat can be torn apart by hand — the centrepiece of American barbecue culture, particularly in the Carolinas.

    16

    Rendang

    An Indonesian slow-cooked dry beef curry from Padang, Sumatra — simmered for hours in coconut milk and spices until the liquid evaporates and the meat is coated in a dark, concentrated paste.

    17

    Salad

    A cold dish of raw or cooked vegetables, leaves, grains, or proteins dressed with oil, acid, or other seasonings — one of the most universally prepared dishes in human food history.

    18

    Sardines

    Small, oily, schooling Atlantic fish — sustainable, nutrient-dense, and traditionally canned in oil or sauce; named for the Mediterranean island of Sardinia where they were first canned commercially.

    19

    Shortbread

    Scotland's most celebrated biscuit — a buttery, crumbly, melt-in-the-mouth confection made from just three ingredients in a 3-2-1 ratio of flour, butter, and sugar; Scots shortbread is associated with Hogmanay, Burns Night, and the gift tins that have represented Scottish craftsmanship worldwide for over a century; Walkers of Aberlour is among the most recognised brands.

    20

    Sourdough

    Bread leavened by wild yeast and lactic acid bacteria captured from flour and air — a 6,000-year-old technique with a 2020 pandemic-era revival, producing complex flavor unobtainable from packaged yeast.

    21

    Udon

    A thick, chewy Japanese wheat noodle, served in steaming bowls of dashi-based broth or with cold dipping sauces, the country's heaviest, heartiest noodle.

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