FOODS

3-syllable Foods that end with E

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.

List of 3-syllable Foods that end with E

    1

    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.

    2

    Baguette

    The long, narrow, crisp-crusted French bread that became the country's most internationally recognizable carbohydrate — surprisingly modern in its current form.

    3

    Black Forest Cake

    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.

    4

    Bolognese

    A slow-cooked Italian meat sauce from Bologna — rich, dense, and emphatically not the tomato-heavy ragù most of the world calls "spaghetti bolognese."

    5

    Camomile

    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.

    6

    Chocolate

    Roasted and ground cacao beans transformed into bars, candies, and beverages — originally a bitter Mesoamerican ceremonial drink, now a $130+ billion global industry.

    7

    Cottage Pie

    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.

    8

    Crème Brûlée

    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.

    9

    Edamame

    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.

    10

    Hollandaise

    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.

    11

    Jollof Rice

    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.

    12

    Kedgeree

    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.

    13

    Lemonade

    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.

    14

    Madeleine

    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.

    15

    Margarine

    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.

    16

    Marmalade

    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.

    17

    Mayonnaise

    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.

    18

    Meringue

    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.

    19

    Minestrone

    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.

    20

    Omelette

    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.

    21

    Panettone

    A tall, dome-topped Italian Christmas bread from Milan — leavened slowly with a sourdough starter and studded with candied fruit and raisins.

    22

    Pumpkin Pie

    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.

    23

    Shepherd's Pie

    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.

    24

    Tamale

    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.

    25

    Tres Leches Cake

    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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