Bisque
A rich, velvety French cream soup classically made from shellfish — lobster, crab, or shrimp — with the shells roasted and simmered to extract maximum flavour before straining smooth.
Foods with exactly 6 letters that contain S — full profile for each.
You're looking for 6-letter foods containing S — here are 13 matches, each linked to a full profile.
A rich, velvety French cream soup classically made from shellfish — lobster, crab, or shrimp — with the shells roasted and simmered to extract maximum flavour before straining smooth.
The pickled flower buds of a Mediterranean caper bush, brining and salting transforming them into briny, lemony bursts that brighten chicken piccata, pasta puttanesca, and bagels with smoked salmon.
A fermented dairy product made by curdling milk and pressing the solids — over 1,800 named varieties globally, with traditions stretching from 7,000-year-old Polish cheese-making sites to modern industrial cheddars.
Thin, lacy French pancakes cooked on a flat griddle and folded around sweet or savory fillings — a Breton specialty turned global street food.
A Cantonese tradition of small steamed and fried bites served from rolling carts at brunch — dumplings, buns, rolls, and savory plates picked piece by piece with tea.
Scotland's national dish — sheep's offal (heart, liver, lungs) minced with oatmeal, onions, and spices, traditionally cooked in a sheep's stomach and served with neeps and tatties.
A creamy Middle Eastern dip of mashed chickpeas, tahini, lemon juice, garlic, and olive oil — eaten with bread, vegetables, or as a base for fuller plates.
A light, airy dessert or savoury preparation made by folding whipped cream or beaten egg whites into a flavoured base — chocolate mousse is the most celebrated version, with its intense dark chocolate flavour suspended in a barely-set, cloud-like texture; salmon mousse is the classic savoury counterpart.
A Tex-Mex snack of tortilla chips topped with melted cheese — invented in 1943 by a Mexican maître d' as a quick meal for US Army wives, now a global sports and cinema staple.
A bivalve mollusk eaten raw on the half-shell or cooked — the seafood with the most distinctive *terroir* of any farmed product, with each oyster bay producing measurably different flavors.
A pink-fleshed migratory fish — the most-eaten fish in many Western markets, eaten raw as sushi, smoked into lox, grilled, baked, and central to Norwegian, Japanese, and Pacific Northwest cooking.
The cornerstone of the British cream tea — small, leavened quick breads made from flour, butter, and buttermilk or milk, baked until risen and golden; served split and spread with clotted cream and strawberry jam; the cream-first versus jam-first controversy (Cornish versus Devonian tradition) is a persistent source of gentle British regional rivalry.
A Japanese root with sharp punch that fills the sinuses — one of the most expensive vegetables to grow, with most "wasabi" served outside Japan being colored horseradish in disguise.
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