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.
Foods pronounced in 4 syllables that contain C — full profile for each.
You're looking for 4-syllable foods containing C — here are 18 matches, each linked to a full profile.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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."
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.
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.
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.
A classic American brunch dish of poached eggs and Canadian bacon stacked on a toasted English muffin and napped with hollandaise sauce.
A corn tortilla rolled around a filling and bathed in chili sauce, baked until tender — a staple of Mexican cuisine since pre-Columbian times.
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.
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.
A Milanese braise of cross-cut veal shanks slow-cooked in white wine, broth, and vegetables until the meat falls from the bone — finished with gremolata and served over saffron risotto.
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.
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.
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.
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.
A German plum cake of dark Italian prune-plums arranged on a yeasted or shortcrust base, baked to a glossy purple, often served with whipped cream in late summer.
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