FOODS

4-syllable Foods that contain A

Foods pronounced in 4 syllables that contain A — full profile for each.

You're looking for 4-syllable foods containing A — here are 48 matches, each linked to a full profile.

List of 4-syllable Foods that contain A

    1

    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.

    2

    Agar-Agar

    A vegetarian gelling agent extracted from red algae, used in East Asian desserts and as a vegan substitute for animal-derived gelatin in jellies, custards, and mousses.

    3

    Agave Syrup

    A liquid sweetener pressed from the core of the blue agave plant, marketed as a natural alternative to honey and sugar — sweeter than table sugar, with a low glycemic index but high fructose content.

    4

    Ajowan Seed

    A small, peppery, thyme-scented seed essential to South Asian breads and pickles — chemically the most thymol-rich spice, sharper than oregano and crucial to lentil dishes.

    5

    Alfalfa Sprouts

    Tender, threadlike sprouts of the alfalfa legume — fresh, mildly nutty, and mostly used raw in sandwiches and salads, despite occasional safety concerns about raw sprouts.

    6

    Amchur Powder

    Indian dried green-mango powder — a tangy, slightly sweet souring agent used in chaat, samosa fillings, and dry-spice blends where lemon juice would water down the texture.

    7

    Annatto Seed

    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.

    8

    Apple Crumble

    Britain's most beloved home-baked dessert — sharp cooking apples underneath a buttery, sandy rubble of flour, butter, and sugar, baked until the fruit is soft and bubbling and the topping is golden and crisp; simple, forgiving, and deeply satisfying; endlessly variable in fruit filling, and nearly always served with custard, cream, or vanilla ice cream.

    9

    Banana Bread

    A moist quick-bread sweetened mostly by overripe bananas — a Depression-era American baking staple now made worldwide.

    10

    Banoffee Pie

    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.

    11

    Beef Stroganoff

    A Russian dish of sautéed beef strips in a sour cream sauce — allegedly created for Count Stroganov's household in St. Petersburg in the 1800s; now a globally adapted comfort dish served over egg noodles or rice.

    12

    Biryani

    A layered rice dish of long-grain basmati cooked with spiced meat or vegetables, born from Persian–Mughal kitchens and refined across the Indian subcontinent.

    13

    Bouillabaisse

    Marseille's legendary fish stew — a saffron-scented broth with at least three species of rockfish, traditionally served in two courses with rouille-spread toast.

    14

    Calamari

    Squid prepared as food, most often coated in batter and deep-fried into golden rings — a Mediterranean fishmonger's mainstay that has gone global as a bar appetizer.

    15

    Canola Oil

    A neutral, high-smoke-point cooking oil pressed from a Canadian-bred variety of rapeseed — one of the most-used oils in North American kitchens and food processing.

    16

    Carambola

    A glossy yellow tropical fruit that produces five-pointed star slices when cut crosswise — Southeast Asian in origin, sweet-tart, and the source of the alternate name "star fruit."

    17

    Carbonara

    Rome's iconic pasta made with guanciale, eggs, Pecorino Romano, and black pepper — no cream, no onion, no garlic; the sauce is an emulsification of egg and fat achieved off the heat.

    18

    Christmas Pudding

    The great British festive dessert — a dense, dark steamed pudding made months in advance with dried fruit, suet, black treacle, spices, and stout or brandy; served flaming with brandy on Christmas Day; traditionally made on Stir-up Sunday (the last Sunday before Advent) and steamed for hours until almost black; often contains hidden silver coins for good luck.

    19

    Ciabatta

    A rustic Italian white bread with an open, holey crumb and crisp crust — invented in 1982 in Verona as an Italian answer to the baguette, now one of the most widely eaten breads in the world.

    20

    Danish Pastry

    Laminated butter pastry of Viennese origin but perfected in Denmark — layers of yeasted dough folded with butter dozens of times, shaped into spirals or envelopes around fruit, custard, or almond fillings.

    21

    Empanada

    A baked or fried turnover of pastry dough wrapped around a savory or sweet filling, found across Spain, Latin America, and the Philippines.

    22

    Enchilada

    A corn tortilla rolled around a filling and bathed in chili sauce, baked until tender — a staple of Mexican cuisine since pre-Columbian times.

    23

    Guacamole

    Mexico's most famous condiment — a simple, fresh dip of mashed avocado with lime juice, coriander, onion, and chilli; invented by the Aztec people using the same basic technique still used today; the quality depends entirely on ripe avocados, and fresh guacamole must be made and eaten immediately before it discolours.

    24

    Jambalaya

    A Louisiana one-pot rice dish blending Spanish paella, French country cooking, and West African influences — meat, sausage, vegetables, and rice cooked together in stock.

    25

    Kung Pao Chicken

    A classic Sichuan stir-fry of diced chicken, dried chillies, Sichuan peppercorns, and peanuts in a tangy sauce — one of the most widely known Chinese dishes internationally, with a troubled name history.

    26

    Mahi-Mahi

    A vivid blue-green-and-gold tropical game fish, also called dolphinfish or dorado — fast-growing, mild-flavored, firm-fleshed, and a staple of Hawaiian and Caribbean fish tacos.

    27

    Malt Vinegar

    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.

    28

    Maple Syrup

    The boiled-down sap of North American sugar maple trees — concentrated to 60+ times its volume into a sticky golden-amber syrup that's the definitive pancake topping and a Quebecois cultural icon.

    29

    Nasi Goreng

    Indonesia's national fried rice dish — cooked with sweet soy sauce (kecap manis), shrimp paste, and chillies, topped with a fried egg and prawn crackers, and rated among the world's best foods.

    30

    Pandanus Leaves

    Long sword-shaped tropical leaves used as the vanilla of Southeast Asia — adding a distinctive grassy, nutty, faintly floral aroma to rice, sweets, and curries.

    31

    Parmesan Cheese

    An aged, hard cow's-milk cheese made for centuries in northern Italy — the most-imitated cheese in the world, with the genuine *Parmigiano-Reggiano* protected by EU law.

    32

    Quesadilla

    A Mexican tortilla folded over melted cheese (and often other fillings), griddled until the cheese is molten and the tortilla is crisp.

    33

    Quinoa Bowl

    A modern Western convenience meal of cooked quinoa topped with vegetables, proteins, and dressings — popularized in the 2010s as a "superfood" alternative to rice bowls and salads.

    34

    Ratatouille

    A Provencal vegetable stew of tomato, eggplant, zucchini, peppers, and onions stewed slowly in olive oil with herbs — peasant food turned French classic.

    35

    Ribollita

    Tuscany's most nourishing peasant soup — a thick, bread-thickened minestrone of cannellini beans, cavolo nero, and winter vegetables, built over several days by rebooling (ribollita means "reboiled") leftovers; the bread dissolves completely, creating a soup so thick a spoon stands upright in it.

    36

    Safflower Oil

    A pale neutral oil pressed from safflower seeds, valued for its high smoke point and high oleic-acid content — common in commercial cooking and salad blends.

    37

    Salade Niçoise

    The defining salad of Nice and the French Riviera — traditionally tuna, anchovies, hard-boiled eggs, tomatoes, black olives, green beans, and artichoke hearts dressed in olive oil; the subject of fierce debate over whether cooked vegetables should be included and whether the tuna should be fresh or tinned; a complete meal that epitomises the flavours of Provence.

    38

    Semolina

    A coarse flour ground from durum wheat — the foundation of dried Italian pasta, North African couscous, Indian semolina cakes (rava), and many other grain traditions across Mediterranean and South Asian cuisine.

    39

    Sesame Oil

    An aromatic oil pressed from sesame seeds — fundamental to East Asian cuisine, with roasted (toasted) and unroasted versions serving very different culinary purposes.

    40

    Sesame Seeds

    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.

    41

    Tapioca

    A starch extracted from cassava roots — sold as flour, beads (boba pearls), or sticks, and used in puddings, gluten-free baking, and the bubble teas of East Asia.

    42

    Tarte Tatin

    The French upside-down apple tart that was allegedly invented by accident when the Tatin sisters forgot to put pastry in the tart dish and tried to rescue it — apples cooked in caramel in a cast-iron pan, covered with pastry, then flipped upside down to reveal a glossy, amber fruit layer over buttery pastry.

    43

    Tinned Mackerel

    Atlantic or Pacific mackerel canned in oil, brine, or tomato sauce — a deeply nutritious pantry staple with high omega-3 content at a fraction of the cost of fresh fish.

    44

    Tiramisu

    An Italian dessert layering espresso-soaked ladyfingers, mascarpone cream, and cocoa — invented relatively recently but now globally iconic.

    45

    Toad in the Hole

    A classic British baked dish of pork sausages embedded in Yorkshire pudding batter — the sausages are browned in fat in a roasting tin until the fat is smoking, then a simple batter of flour, egg, and milk is poured around them and the whole dish goes into a very hot oven until the batter is risen, golden, and crispy at the edges.

    46

    Ube Halaya

    A Filipino purple yam jam — a thick, intensely purple, sweet confection made from ube (purple yam), coconut milk, and condensed milk, used as a dessert on its own or as a flavouring across Filipino sweets.

    47

    Welsh Rarebit

    A glorified cheese on toast that is entirely its own thing — a rich, savoury sauce of mature cheddar melted with ale, mustard, Worcestershire sauce, and egg yolk, spread thickly on toast and grilled until bubbling and browned; one of the great British dishes, far more than the sum of its parts.

    48

    Yellow Papaw

    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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