Apple Pie
A classic baked dessert of spiced apple slices in a flaky pastry crust, deeply rooted in American comfort food but with European origins.
Foods pronounced in 3 syllables that end with E — full profile for each.
You're looking for 3-syllable foods ending with E — here are 25 matches, each linked to a full profile.
A classic baked dessert of spiced apple slices in a flaky pastry crust, deeply rooted in American comfort food but with European origins.
The long, narrow, crisp-crusted French bread that became the country's most internationally recognizable carbohydrate — surprisingly modern in its current form.
Germany's most famous layered cake — dark chocolate sponge soaked in Kirschwasser cherry brandy, filled with whipped cream and sour cherries, and finished with chocolate shavings.
A slow-cooked Italian meat sauce from Bologna — rich, dense, and emphatically not the tomato-heavy ragù most of the world calls "spaghetti bolognese."
A gentle herbal infusion brewed from the dried flowers of the chamomile plant, prized for centuries as a calming bedtime tea and a mild digestive remedy.
Roasted and ground cacao beans transformed into bars, candies, and beverages — originally a bitter Mesoamerican ceremonial drink, now a $130+ billion global industry.
Britain's most comforting baked dish — a rich minced beef and vegetable filling in a thick gravy, topped with a layer of creamy mashed potato and baked until the surface is golden and crisp; the word "cottage" refers to the humble rural home it was associated with, and "shepherd's pie" is the lamb version.
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.
Young green soybeans boiled or steamed in their fuzzy pods and salted — a Japanese drinking snack (*otsumami*) and now a globally popular bar food and protein-rich starter.
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.
West Africa's most celebrated dish — rice cooked in a rich tomato and pepper sauce until it absorbs all the liquid and develops a prized smoky crust at the bottom of the pot; the subject of an ongoing "Jollof Wars" debate between Nigeria, Ghana, and Senegal over who makes it best.
A British breakfast classic with Indian origins — flaked smoked haddock, boiled eggs, and spiced rice with butter, onion, parsley, and curry powder; brought to Britain by returning colonial officials, it was a Victorian breakfast staple and remains beloved as a substantial weekend brunch.
A sweetened lemon juice drink — one of the world's most widely consumed beverages, with a fundamental divide between the cloudy fresh-squeezed Western style and the clear Asian and Middle Eastern variants.
A small, shell-shaped French sponge cake from the Lorraine region — light, buttery, and flavoured with lemon zest, baked in a distinctive shell-shaped mould; the madeleine owes its extraordinary cultural fame to Marcel Proust, whose narrator in In Search of Lost Time triggers a rush of involuntary memory upon tasting one dipped in tea, making it the literary symbol of nostalgia and sensory memory.
An emulsion of vegetable oils and water designed as a butter substitute — invented in 19th-century France for naval rations and now a global pantry staple.
The bittersweet British breakfast preserve — a citrus jelly made from bitter Seville oranges, with shreds of peel suspended throughout; distinguished from jam by its bitter edge, its orange peel texture, and its exclusive association with citrus; Dundee in Scotland became the global capital of marmalade production, and Keiller's Dundee marmalade has been made since the 1790s; Paddington Bear's devotion to it is the most famous brand association in British food.
An emulsion of oil, egg yolk, and acid — invented in 18th-century France, now the foundation of countless dressings, dips, and sandwich spreads worldwide, with strong cultural variations in preferred formulations.
A confection of whipped egg whites and sugar — baked low and slow to produce crisp shells, piled on lemon tart, or swirled into soft peaks on pavlova and baked Alaska; three distinct types with different ratios and techniques.
Italy's great peasant vegetable soup — a thick, hearty broth with seasonal vegetables, beans, and pasta or rice; every Italian region has a version, and there is no single authoritative recipe.
A folded preparation of beaten eggs cooked in a pan, often with fillings — simple in form, technically exacting at the highest level, and a global breakfast staple.
A tall, dome-topped Italian Christmas bread from Milan — leavened slowly with a sourdough starter and studded with candied fruit and raisins.
America's Thanksgiving dessert — a spiced custard of pumpkin purée, eggs, cream, and warming spices baked in a shortcrust shell; the pumpkin spice flavour profile is among the most commercially influential in American food.
A British baked casserole of minced lamb (or beef, correctly called cottage pie) under a mashed potato crust, browned under the grill — a frugal dish designed to use leftover roast meat.
Mesoamerica's ancient wrapped food — masa dough (nixtamalised corn) spread on a corn husk or banana leaf, filled with seasoned meat, chilli, cheese, or beans, then wrapped and steamed; eaten at Christmas and celebrations throughout Mexico and Central America.
Latin America's most beloved celebration cake — a light sponge soaked in a mixture of three milks (evaporated milk, condensed milk, and cream) until saturated, then topped with whipped cream; improbably rich yet impossibly light.
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