List of dumplings
This is a list of dumplings. Dumplings are cooked balls of dough based on flour, potatoes or bread. They may include meat, fish, vegetables, or sweets. They may be cooked by boiling, steaming, simmering, frying, or baking. They may have a filling, or there may be other ingredients mixed into the dough. Dumplings may be sweet or savory, and are made in many various cuisines in the world.
Dumplings
A
- Ada is a traditional Kerala delicacy, consisting of rice parcels encased in a dough made of rice flour, with sweet fillings, steamed in banana leaf and served as an evening snack or as part of breakfast.
- Akashiyaki is a small round dumpling from the city of Akashi in Hyōgo Prefecture, Japan. It's made of an egg-rich batter and octopus dipped into dashi (a thin fish broth) before eating.
B
- Ba-wan
- Bánh bao
- Bánh chưng
- Bánh lá
- Bánh tẻ
- Bánh tét
- Baozi
- Blodpalt
- Borș de burechiușe
- Bryndzové halušky
- Buuz
C
- Caozai guo
- Capuns
- Cepelinai
- Chapalele
- Chicken and dumplings
- Chiburekki
- Chuchvara
- Ci fan tuan
- Corunda
- Crab rangoon
D
F
G
H
I
J
K
- Kalduny
- Kenkey
- Khinkali
- Khuushuur
- Kibbeh
- Knödel
- Kluski
- Knedle
- Knish
- Knoephla
- Kopytka
- Kozhukkattai
- Kreplach
- Kroppkaka
- Kueh tutu
- Kuih kochi
- Kundumy
- Kalduny are stuffed dumplings made of unleavened dough in Belarusian, Lithuanian, and Polish cuisines
- Meat-filled kreplach in a clear soup. Kreplach are filled with ground meat, mashed potatoes or another filling, usually boiled and served in chicken soup, though they may, rarely, be served fried.[1]
L
M
.
- Mandu
- Manduguk
- Mandugwa
- Manti
- Marillenknödel
- Matzah ball
- Maultasche
- Mitarashi dango
- Modak
- Mohnnudel
- Momo
N
O
P
- Palt
- Pamonha
- Pantruca
- Pasteles
- Pelmeni
- Pempek
- Pickert
- Pierogi
- Pitepalt
- Plum dumplings
- Poutine râpée
- Pundi
Q
R
S
- Samosa
- Schupfnudel
- Scovardă
- Shengjian mantou
- Shishbarak
- Shlishkes
- Shumai
- Silesian dumplings
- Siopao
- Strapačky
- Suanla chaoshou
- Szilvásgombóc
T
U
V
W
X
Y
- Yomari is made of rice flour dough and is filled with molasses and sesame seeds
Z
See also
References
- ↑ Claudia Roden, The Book of Jewish Food: An Odyssey from Samarkand and Vilna to the Present Day, Penguin Books, 1999, p. 77-78. ISBN 0140466096
Further reading
- Nguyen, Andrea (2011). Asian Dumplings. Random House LLC. ISBN 1607740923
- Robbins, Maria Polushkin; Polushkin, Maria (1977). The Dumpling Cookbook. Workman Publishing Company. ISBN 0911104852
External links
- Media related to Dumplings at Wikimedia Commons
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