FOODS

4-syllable Foods that contain P

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

You're looking for 4-syllable foods containing P — here are 17 matches, each linked to a full profile.

List of 4-syllable Foods that contain P

    1

    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.

    2

    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.

    3

    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.

    4

    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.

    5

    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.

    6

    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.

    7

    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.

    8

    Empanada

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

    9

    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.

    10

    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.

    11

    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.

    12

    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.

    13

    Profiteroles

    Small choux pastry puffs filled with whipped cream or crème pâtissière and topped with warm chocolate sauce — a classic French dessert found on the menus of bistros and brasseries worldwide; the choux pastry puffs are hollow, light, and airy, and the combination with cold cream and warm chocolate sauce is one of the great textural contrasts in French patisserie.

    14

    Sheep's Milk Yoghurt

    A thick, rich yoghurt made from sheep's milk with more protein, fat, and calcium than cow's milk yoghurt — a staple of Balkan, Greek, and Middle Eastern food cultures with a distinctively creamy, tangy character.

    15

    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.

    16

    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.

    17

    Yorkshire Pudding

    England's great savoury batter pudding — a simple batter of flour, eggs, and milk poured into extremely hot beef dripping in a tin; the violent steam creates a golden, hollow vessel that rises dramatically above its tin.

Other ways to filter

Adjust the filter in the sidebar, or jump to all 4-syllable foods, all foods that contain P, or the full foods index.