Baguette
The long, narrow, crisp-crusted French bread that became the country's most internationally recognizable carbohydrate — surprisingly modern in its current form.
Foods with exactly 8 letters that contain U — full profile for each.
You're looking for 8-letter foods containing U — here are 15 matches, each linked to a full profile.
The long, narrow, crisp-crusted French bread that became the country's most internationally recognizable carbohydrate — surprisingly modern in its current form.
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 pocket of dough wrapped around a filling — boiled, steamed, fried, or baked — found in nearly every cuisine on Earth.
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.
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.
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 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.
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.
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 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.
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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