Allspice
A single dried berry from a Caribbean tree whose flavor combines cinnamon, clove, and nutmeg in one — central to Jamaican jerk seasoning, Middle Eastern stews, and pickling spice blends.
Foods with exactly 8 letters that contain L — full profile for each.
You're looking for 8-letter foods containing L — here are 17 matches, each linked to a full profile.
A single dried berry from a Caribbean tree whose flavor combines cinnamon, clove, and nutmeg in one — central to Jamaican jerk seasoning, Middle Eastern stews, and pickling spice blends.
A classic baked dessert of spiced apple slices in a flaky pastry crust, deeply rooted in American comfort food but with European origins.
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 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.
A pocket of dough wrapped around a filling — boiled, steamed, fried, or baked — found in nearly every cuisine on Earth.
A tropical rhizome resembling ginger but with a sharper, more pine-camphor flavor — essential to Thai *tom kha* and *tom yum*, and the dominant aromatic in Indonesian and Malaysian cooking.
A semi-hard Cypriot brined cheese with the unique property of holding its shape under high heat — sliced and grilled directly without melting, producing a salty-rubbery-juicy bite beloved across the Eastern Mediterranean.
Poland's iconic sausage — a coarsely ground pork sausage heavily seasoned with garlic, marjoram, and black pepper, smoked over hardwood for a deep, earthy flavour; eaten grilled, boiled in bigos stew, or sliced cold; as central to Polish food culture as bratwurst is to German.
Turkish and Armenian thin-crust flatbread topped with spiced minced meat — described as "Turkish pizza" though older and simpler, rolled up with fresh herbs, lemon, and raw onion and eaten as a street food.
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.
A small oily fish with rich savory flavor — heavily eaten across North Atlantic and Pacific cuisines, prized for its omega-3 content, abundance, and traditional preservation methods like smoking and salting.
An edible flower (specifically Calendula officinalis or Tagetes species) used historically as "poor man's saffron" for color, with a slight peppery flavor — featuring in salads, garnishes, soups, and Mexican Day of the Dead celebrations.
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.
A bivalve mollusk eaten almost exclusively as the white adductor muscle that closes its fan-shaped shell — sweet, tender, and one of the few seafoods that benefits from a dramatic sear.
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.
A whipped cream dessert from Tudor and Stuart England — sweet double cream whipped with white wine or sherry, lemon zest, and sugar until it stands in soft, cloud-like peaks; one of the oldest still-made British desserts, syllabub was fashionable at Elizabethan and Stuart banquets and is now enjoying a quiet revival as a light, elegant alternative to heavy puddings.
A fiery Goan curry with Portuguese roots — pork marinated in vinegar and garlic (the original *vinha d'alhos*) transformed by Goan cooks into a chilli-intense, tangy curry; now a British curry-house staple associated with maximum heat.
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