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 S — full profile for each.
You're looking for 8-letter foods containing S — 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.
Tiny semolina granules steamed to light fluffiness — the staple grain of North Africa, traditionally steamed over a slow-cooked stew in a couscoussier and served with lamb, vegetables, and harissa.
A concentrated shot of coffee brewed by forcing pressurized hot water through finely-ground beans, the foundation of most Italian café drinks.
Britain's most gloriously chaotic dessert — crushed meringue, whipped cream, and fresh strawberries tumbled together in a mess that is supposed to look accidental; traditionally served at Eton College's annual cricket match against Harrow, it is now a staple of British summer tables and garden parties.
Japan's most comforting rice bowl — a breaded pork cutlet (tonkatsu) simmered in a sweet dashi and soy broth with sliced onion, then bound with a lightly set egg and served over steamed rice; a staple of Japanese home cooking and affordable restaurant menus.
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.
The definitive dish of Greek cuisine — layers of fried eggplant, spiced ground lamb or beef, and tomato sauce, topped with a thick béchamel and baked until golden; related versions exist across the Balkans and Middle East.
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.
A flat, round griddle cake of batter — leavened or thin — eaten worldwide for breakfast or as a wrapper for savory and sweet fillings.
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.
Ground meat seasoned and stuffed into casing — a near-universal preserved-meat tradition with hundreds of regional forms, from Italian salami to Polish kielbasa to British bangers.
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 salty fermented Asian condiment made from soybeans, wheat, salt, and koji — the most-used condiment in East Asian cooking and increasingly globalized as a savory base for dishes worldwide.
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.
An Italian dessert layering espresso-soaked ladyfingers, mascarpone cream, and cocoa — invented relatively recently but now globally iconic.
Japan's beloved breaded pork cutlet — thick-cut pork loin or fillet coated in panko breadcrumbs and deep-fried, served with shredded cabbage and tonkatsu sauce; a Meiji-era adaptation of Western schnitzel that became distinctly Japanese.
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