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.
Foods with exactly 8 letters that contain R — full profile for each.
You're looking for 8-letter foods containing R — here are 18 matches, each linked to a full profile.
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.
An ancient pseudocereal seed that was a staple of the Aztec Empire, packed with complete protein and gluten-free, popped like popcorn or simmered into porridge.
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 concentrated shot of coffee brewed by forcing pressurized hot water through finely-ground beans, the foundation of most Italian café drinks.
Italy's answer to the omelette — an open-faced egg dish started on the stovetop and finished under the grill, loaded with vegetables, cheese, and cured meats; served at room temperature as antipasto.
A refreshing cold drink made from tiger nuts, rice, or almonds — the Spanish original (*horchata de chufa*) is made from tiger nuts and is a Valencia speciality; the Mexican version is a sweet, cinnamon-laced rice milk; both are cooling, milky, and naturally dairy-free.
A frozen dairy dessert of cream, sugar, and flavorings churned into a soft, smooth, semi-frozen state — the most-eaten dessert in the world.
A British breakfast classic with Indian origins — flaked smoked haddock, boiled eggs, and spiced rice with butter, onion, parsley, and curry powder; brought to Britain by returning colonial officials, it was a Victorian breakfast staple and remains beloved as a substantial weekend brunch.
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 Mediterranean herb closely related to oregano but milder and sweeter — central to French herbes de Provence, Italian sausage seasonings, German bratwurst, and ancient Greek aphrodisiac traditions.
A confection of whipped egg whites and sugar — baked low and slow to produce crisp shells, piled on lemon tart, or swirled into soft peaks on pavlova and baked Alaska; three distinct types with different ratios and techniques.
Oats cooked in water or milk until creamy and thick — one of humanity's oldest foods and Britain's most sustaining breakfast, eaten across the whole country but with particular cultural importance in Scotland where it was historically made with salt and eaten standing up; now topped with everything from honey to whisky.
A dense, dark bread made from rye flour — staple of Scandinavian, German, Eastern European, and Jewish Ashkenazi cuisines, with a distinctive sour flavour from extended fermentation.
Small, oily, schooling Atlantic fish — sustainable, nutrient-dense, and traditionally canned in oil or sauce; named for the Mediterranean island of Sardinia where they were first canned commercially.
A slender-leafed Mediterranean herb with anise-licorice notes — the defining flavor of French béarnaise sauce, classical roast chicken, and the central herb of *fines herbes* mixtures.
An Italian dessert layering espresso-soaked ladyfingers, mascarpone cream, and cocoa — invented relatively recently but now globally iconic.
A tart, slightly sweet juice pressed from unripe grapes — a medieval European cooking acid that fell out of fashion and is now slowly returning.
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