S
-
Sabayon Sauce - The French word for "Zabaglione," an ethereal
dessert made by whisking egg yolks,
Marsala wine, and sugar over simmering
water to convert the eggs into a foamy
custard.
-
Sabayon:
A sauce resembling custard, mainly used
for puddings or vanilla ice cream.
Sabayon is made of wine, sugar, and egg
yolks.
-
Sablefish - This saltwater fish has a soft-textured flesh
and a mild flavor. Its high fat content
makes it a good fish for smoking. Called
"Alaskan cod," "Black Cod,"
"Butterfish," and "Skil," although it is
neither a cod nor a butterfish.
-
Saccharin:
A product made from coal tar, used as a
substitute for sugar. Saccharin has no
food value.
-
Saccharine - This sugar substitute contains 1/8 calorie per
teaspoon and is said to be about 400
times sweeter than sugar. Some feel that
saccharine has a bitter aftertaste.
There is also controversy as to whether
or not it is a carcinogen.
-
Sachet bag:
Cloth bag filled with select herbs used
to season soups or stocks.
-
Sack
is a dry
sherry, which first found
favour with the nobles in
England during the Tudour
period.
-
Safflower Oil - A light, odorless, flavorless and colorless
cold-pressed oil made from white seeds
of the safflower plant. It contains more
polyunsaturates than any other vegetable
oil, and it has a high smoke point.
-
Safflower Seed - The seeds of the safflower plant, used to
yield a low-cholesterol oil used in
cooking oils and margarines.
-
Safflower Seed Meal - A meal made from the seed of the
safflower plant. The seeds are rich in
polyunsaturated fats. Also called
"Mexican saffron" because the flower's
stigmas can produce a lower quality
substitute for the expensive "saffron."
-
Saffron - The dried stigmas from the tiny blossom of the
small crocus, Corcus satirus. Also
called "vegetable gold," saffron is the
world's most expensive herb because it
takes 4,000 to 5,000 hand-picked stigmas
to produce an ounce of the herb.
-
Sage - There are over 500 varieties of this herb that are prized
for their aromatic bitter flavor. Used
to season pork, cheese, beans,
stuffings, and sausages.
-
Sahti is the traditional
style of beer brewed in
Finland. It is a strong
(around 8%) unfiltered, hazy,
reddish-amber brew, quite flat with a
spicy, bitter-sweet flavour. It is
brewed with
rye rather than
barley and
juniper rather than
hops.
-
Sake -
Japanese rice wine. Used as an alcoholic
beverage and in oriental cookery. The
alcohol content is typically between 12
and 15 percent by volume.
-
Saki (Sake) is a Japanese
beer made from unmalted
rice and Koji cake.
-
Salamander:
A small broiler used to brown or gratin
foods.
-
Salami - Any of a family of boldly seasoned sausages
similar to "cervelats," except that they
tend to contain more garlic and are
coarser and drier than cervelats.
Salamis are rarely smoked. "Pepperoni"
is a popular type of salami.
-
Salem Porter
is a deep, dark
porter with a nutty, dry
taste from the Bateman family
brewery in
Wainfleet,
Lincolnshire.
-
Salisbury best
is a sweetish
bitter from the
Gibbs Mews brewery in
Salisbury,
Wiltshire.
-
Salisbury Steak - A ground beef patty seasoned with onions and
seasonings before it is broiled or fried
and served with gravy. Named after Dr.
J. H. Salisbury who recommended eating a
lot of beef for a wide variety of
ailments.
-
Salmagundi
is a mixture of pickled herrings, cold
dressed chicken or
turkey,
salt
beef, radishes,
endive and olives arranged
artistically with regard to a contrast
of colour and flavour, served with
oil,
vinegar, salt and
pepper. Sometimes pickled
cabbage and anchovies are
added.
-
Salmi
is a game and
vegetable stew in a rich sauce.
-
Salmon - Perhaps the best-known of all fish, pictures
of salmon from 12,000 B.C. have been
found. Salmon migrate from the seas into
freshwater to spawn. Over the years,
some varieties have become landlocked in
lakes.
-
Salopian bitter
is a fruity, hoppy cask
bitter from the Salopian
brewery,
Shrewsbury.
-
Salsa - The Mexican word for "sauce." There are many
varieties: cooked and uncooked, chunky
to smooth, green to red, hot to mild.
-
Salsify - Also known as the "oyster plant," this
biennial herb is cultivated for its root
which is used as a vegetable. Its taste
hints of a delicately flavored oyster.
Can be found in the U.S. in Spanish,
Italian, and Greek markets.
-
Salt - The mineral "sodium chloride." Most of today's salt comes
from mines left by dried salt lakes.
Used as a flavoring agent in many foods.
Because of its value as a preservative,
salt was a vital commodity to early
civilization.
-
Salt Pork - The salt-cured layer of fat taken from the
pig's belly and sides. Salt pork is
sometimes confused with fatback, which
is unsalted. It is similar to bacon
except that it is much fattier an has
not been smoked.
-
Salt Substitute - A substitute for salt that contains little or
no sodium. Used by persons on a salt
restricted diet.
-
Samshoo
is a Chinese liquor distilled from
rice or
sorghum.
-
Samuel Smith's
imperial stout is a rich, heavy, bottled
stout from the famous North
Yorkshire brewery in
Tadcaster, which is best served and
enjoyed as a
liqueur.
-
Samuel Smith's oatmeal stout
is a distinctive stout with a thick,
dark texture and chocolatey, fruity
flavor.
-
Sancocho
is a South American and
Caribbean rich soup or stew
of
fish, meat and vegetables.
-
Sangaree
is an alcoholic beverage made from
wine diluted with water and
mixed with spices and
sugar and drunk iced.
-
Sanoche
is a Trinidadian pork and
beef and
yam and dasheen and
cassava stew.
-
Sapodilla - A large evergreen tree of tropical America
that bears an edible fruit. The
sapodilla is the source of "chicle," the
key ingredient in the manufacture of
chewing gum.
-
Sapote - This tree, native to Mexico and Central
America, is also called the "marmalade
tree" or "sapota." It offers a sweet,
edible fruit. "Sapote" is also used to
refer to the "sapadilla tree."
-
Sardine - The name describing several varieties of
weak-boned fish including the Alewife,
French Sardine, Herring, and Sprat.
Named after the French island of
Sardina. Often salted, smoked, or canned
and packed in oil, tomato, or mustard
sauce.
-
Sarsaparilla -
This flavor was originally derived from
the dried roots of tropical smilax
vines. Today, products featuring
sarsaparilla use artificial flavors.
-
SAS - Strong Anglian
Special - is a dry, well-balanced cask
bitter produced by the
Crouch
Vale brewery,
Essex.
-
Satsuma Orange - A small Japanese orange that belongs to the
Mandarin family. It contains relatively
few seeds.
-
Sauce - A thickened and flavored liquid that is
created to enhance the flavor of the
food that it accompanies. In the days
before refrigeration, sauces were used
to disguise the taste of foods that were
going bad.
-
Sauerkraut - German for "sour cabbage." Made by combining
cabbage, salt, and occasionally other
spices and permitting the mixture to
ferment. Though thought of as a German
invention, this pickled food was eaten
in China over 2,000 years ago.
-
Saumur are varieties of good
quality French
wine, both still and
sparkling.
-
Sausage - Basically, sausage is ground meat with fat,
salt, seasonings, preservatives, and
sometimes fillers. They may be smoked,
fresh, dry or semi-dry, uncooked,
partially cooked, or fully cooked. There
are thousands of variations of sausage.
-
Sauterne -
A sweet wine from the Sauternes region
of France. It is made from Sauvignon
Blanc or Semillon grapes that have been
infected with a special mold that causes
them to shrivel and leave a sugary fruit
with highly concentrated flavors.
-
Sauvignon Blanc -
An excellent white-wine grape that
rivals Chardonnay and the Reisling. This
grape imparts a grassy, herbaceous
flavor to the wines produced from them.
-
Savory - A strongly flavored herb of the mint family.
There are two varieties: winter and
summer. The summer savory is slightly
milder, but both should be used
carefully. Savory has a flavor
reminiscent of a cross between thyme and
mint.
-
Savoy Cabbage - A loose, full headed, and mellow-flavored
cabbage that is considered by many to be
the finest cabbage for cooking.
-
Scallion - Also called "spring onions," these are very
young ordinary onions (such as
"shallots") picked when beds of onions
need to be thinned.
-
Scallop - A bivalve mollusk with a ribbed, fan-shaped
shell. In U.S. markets, only the
adductor muscle, which opens and closes
the shell is available. The Bay scallop
is smaller, sweeter and a bit more
succulent that their deep sea
counterparts.
-
Scallop -
To prepare food by layering slices with
cream or cream sauce in a casserole.
These foods are often topped with bread
or cracker crumbs before being baked.
"Scallop" also refers to forming a
decorative edge in the rim of pie dough.
-
Scallop Squash - A flat, whitish variety of squash that
features a scalloped edge. Also known as
"cymling" and "pattypan squash."
-
Scampi - The Italian name for the tail portion of any
of several varieties of miniature
lobsters. In the U.S., the term refers
to large shrimp that are split and
brushed in a garlic oil or butter, then
broiled. "Scampo" is the singular form.
-
Scorzonera - Also called "black salsify," this is a
black-skinned variety of salsify. Most
varieties of this vegetable are grayish
or pale golden in color.
-
Scotch -
This distinctive liquor, made only in
Scotland, uses barley for flavoring
instead of corn (which is used in
American whiskeys). The sprouted malted
barley is dried over peat fires to
impart a characteristic smoky flavor to
the scotch.
-
Scotch Woodcock
is a jocular name for a preparaton of
toast and finnan
haddock.
-
Screwdriver -
An alcoholic beverage made with orange
juice and vodka. It is said to have been
named by American oil-rig workers in the
Middle East who opened and stirred cans
of this beverage with their
screwdrivers.
-
Scrod - Scrod is the name for young cod (and haddock)
that weight less that 2.5 pounds. It is
a popular fish from the Pacific and the
North Atlantic with a lean, firm, white
flesh. "Haddock," "hake," and "pollock"
are close relatives of the cod.
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Scup - Also know as "porgie" or "sea bream." These fish are
generally lean, and coarse-grained. Scup
is often grilled, poached, and
pan-fried.
-
Sea Bass - A term used to describe a number of lean to
moderately fat marine fish, most of
which aren't actually members of the
bass family. "Striped bass" and "Black
Sea bass" are true bass. The "white sea
bass" is a member of the drum family.
-
Sea Bream - Also know as "scup." These marine fish are
generally lean, and coarse-grained. Sea
bream is often grilled, poached, and
pan-fried.
-
Sea Devil - This large low-fat, firm-textured salt-water
fish has a mild, sweet flavor that
compares with lobster. Also called
"angler fish" "monkfish," and
"goosefish."
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SEA is a malty
bitter from the
Donnington brewery,
Stowon-the-Weld.
-
Sea Perch - This important commercial fish is a member of
the rockfish group. Also known as "ocean
perch," although it is not a true perch.
-
Sea Salt - Salt produced by evaporating sea water. Salt
produced in this manner is more
expensive than salt that has been mined.
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Sea Trout - An anadromous (spawns in fresh water) brown
trout that spends part to its life cycle
in the sea. Sea trout have meat that is
pink to red in color and is very
comparable to salmon. May be prepared
any way appropriate for salmon.
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Seafood Sauce - A combination of catsup or chili sauce with
prepared horseradish, lemon juice, and
hot red pepper seasoning. Used with
seafood and as a condiment for hors
d'oeuvres.
-
Seaweed - Any of a multitude of sea plants from the
algae family. Used in soups, as
vegetables, in teas, in shushi, and as a
seasoning. Seaweed is a rich source of
iodine. A seaweed called "carrageen," is
used in McDonald's McLean hamburger.
-
Seltzer -
A flavorless, naturally effervescent
water that takes its name from the town
of Nieder Selters in Germany. Soda water
is man-made by injecting carbon dioxide
into water.
-
Semolina - The purified middlings (medium-sized
particles) of wheat. The best semolina,
the type used to make macaroni,
spaghetti, and other pastas, comes from
the milling of Durum wheat, a very hard
variety of wheat.
-
Serenata
is a
salt codfish and vegetable
salad eaten in the Dominican
Republic.
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Sesame Oil - This oil is high in polyunsaturated fast (4th
behind safflower, soybean, and corn).
There are two basic forms: light and
dark. The light form is lighter in color
and flavor and has a hint of nuttiness.
The dark from is much stronger.
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Sesame Seed - A tiny, flat seed with a nutty, slightly sweet
flavor used in breads, cakes,
confections, cookies, pastries, and
salads. This seed was used at least as
far back as 3,000 B.C. in Assyria.
-
Sesbania Flower - The edible flower of a tree native to the
South Pacific and pasts of Asia.
Especially popular as a food in the
Philippines. Also called "Katuray."
-
Shad - Small, delicate saltwater fish related to the alewife,
herring, and sardine. They are larger
than herrings and spawn in fresh water.
Some species of shad have been
landlocked and live in freshwater lakes.
-
Shakemantle Ginger
is a cloudy,
ginger
wheat beer produced by the
Freeminer brewery,
Gloucestershire.
-
Shallot - The mild-flavored cousin to the onion, chive,
leek, and garlic. The bulb is edible and
is used like onions or garlic. The green
tops are harvested and marketed as
"scallions."
-
Shark - A flavorful, low-fat fish that includes
varieties such as Leopard, Mako, Spiny
Dogfish, Soupfin and Thresher. Shark
meat tends to have an ammonia-like smell
that can be eliminated by soaking the
flesh in milk or acidulated water.
-
Sheanut Oil - Oil from the seed of the shea tree, an African
tree from the sapodilla family. "Shea
butter" (also called "galam butter") is
the solid green, yellow, or white fat
derived from the seeds of the shea tree.
-
Sheepshead - A saltwater fish belonging to the wrasse
family. Also called "California
Sheephead," "Fathead," and "Redhead."
Its meat is white, tender, and lean.
-
Shefford Bitter
is a good, well-balanced, real
ale from B&T,
Bedfordshire.
-
Sherry -
This famous Spanish fortified wine is
also made in the U.S. Sherries range in
color, flavor, and sweetness. They are
drunk as an apértif (appetizer) or after
dinner. Cry sherries are usually served
cold; sweet sherries unchilled.
-
Shortening - Any fat, liquid, or solid used in pastry,
dough, or batter for making the
resulting product flakier, richer, or
more tender. In common use are
hydrogenated shortenings like butter,
lard, margarine, and the edible oils.
-
Shoyu - A dark, salty sauce made from fermenting
boiled soybeans and roasted wheat or
barley. Extremely popular in the Orient;
used to flavor fish, meat, marinades,
sauces, soups, and vegetables. Better
known in U.S. as "soy sauce."
-
Shrimp - American's most valuable and popular
shellfish. This ten-legged crustacean
got its name from English word
"shrimpe," which means "puny person."
-
Shropshire lad
is a flavoursome
bitter produced by the Wood
Brewery,
Wistanstow.
-
Shropshire stout
is a deep-red, rich, dry cask beer from
the
Hanby brewery,
Shropshire.
-
Sicama - Large bulbous root vegetable with a thin brown
skin and a white crunchy flesh with a
texture similar to water chestnut. It
has a sweet, nutty flavor and can be
eaten raw or cooked. Also called
"Jicama."
-
Silver Hake - A small gray and white saltwater fish that is
also called the "whiting." This low-fat
fish, which is related to both the "cod"
and the "hake," has a tender white
fine-textured flesh and a flaky,
delicate flavor.
-
Silver Salmon - This high-fat variety of salmon provides a
firm-textured, pink to orange-red flesh.
Also called the "coho salmon."
-
Sim Sim - A tiny, flat seed with a nutty, slightly sweet
flavor used in breads, cakes,
confections, cookies, pastries, and
salads. This seed was used at least as
far back as 3,000 B.C. in Assyria.
Better known in U.S. markets as "sesame
seed."
-
Singapore Sling -
A cocktail of gin, cherry brandy, and
lemon juice. This mixture is shaken in
ice, strained into a tall glass, and
topped off with soda water. Said to have
originated in Singapore's Raffles Hotel.
-
Single malt
is a powerful, seasonal
ale which uses
whisky
malt in the brewing process,
from
Mitchell' s brewery in
Lancaster.
-
Sirloin - A cut of beef that lies between the Short Loin
(very tender) and the Round (much
tougher).
-
Skate - This kite-shaped fish features edible fins.
The flesh is firm, white, and sweet,
similar to the texture and taste of
scallop. Also called "Skate."
-
Skil - This saltwater fish has a soft-textured flesh and a mild
flavor. Its high fat content makes it a
good fish for smoking. Also "black cod"
and "sablefish," although it is not a
cod.
-
Skipjack Tuna - Also called the "oceanic bonito,"
"watermelon," and "Arctic bonito," this
small tuna (6 to 8 pounds) has a
light-colored meat similar to yellowfin.
The Japanese call this fish "katsuo" and
the Hawaiians call it "aku."
-
Skokiaan
is a strong, home-brewed alcoholic
liquer fermented with
yeast in
South Africa.
-
Skunk Cabbage - A perennial herb of the arum family. Its thick
leaf stalk is used in salads after it
has been boiled in two or more changes
of water. Also known as "swamp cabbage."
-
Slaughter porter
is a dark, roasted, malty
porter produced by the
Freeminer brewery,
Gloucestershire.
-
Sliver -
To cut foods into thin strips.
-
Sloe Gin -
A liqueur made by steeping gin with
crushed sloes. "Sloes" are wild European
plums with an extremely tart flesh.
-
Smelt - A rich and oily mild-flavored fish. Popular
varieties of smelt include "Eulachon"
and "Whitebait." The eulachon is called
the "candlefish" because Indians
sometimes run a wick through their
high-fat flesh and use them for candles.
-
Smiles best bitter
is a rich, brown-coloured,
clean-tasting, sweetish
bitter with a dry, bitter
finish from the
Bristol brewery.
-
Smuggler
is a bitter-sweet, hoppy, fruity beer
from the Rebellion brewery,
Buckinghamshire.
-
Snail - Popular since prehistoric times, the snail was
greatly favored by ancient Romans who
set aside special vineyards where snails
could feed and fatten.
-
Snap Bean - A small green bean that is eaten in its long
green pod. The snap bean used to have a
fibrous "string" down the center of the
pod; this characteristic has been bred
out of the species. Also called "green
bean" and "string bean."
-
Snapper - There are a few hundred species of this lean,
firm-textured saltwater fish, 15 or so
which are available in the U.S. The most
popular snapper is the "red snapper."
Some species of rockfish and tilefish
are called snappers, but are not.
-
Sneck lifter is a rich,
dark malty premium
bitter from the
Jennings brewery in the
Lake District. Also available
in a bottle.
-
Soba - A Japanese noodle made from buckwheat flour. The buckwheat
gives soba a dark brownish gray color.
-
Sockeye Salmon - Prized for canning, the sockeye salmon has a
firm, red flesh. Also known as the
"redeye salmon."
-
Soft Drink -
Any drink that is non-alcoholic.
Although carbonation is not required,
most people think of soft drinks as
being effervescent.
-
Softshell Crab - The "soft-shell crab" is actually the blue
crab caught just after molting
(discarding its shell). This crab is
found along the Gulf and Atlantic
coasts. It is sold in both its soft and
hard-shell stages.
-
Sole - A popular flatfish with a delicate flesh with a firm, fine
texture. The best-known variety is
"Dover sole" (also called "channel
sole)." Much of what is sold as "sole"
in the U.S. is actually a variety of
flounder, which isn't a true sole.
-
Sorghum - A genus of cereal grasses with a large number
of species, cultivated throughout the
world for food, forage, and syrup. It is
the world's third largest food grain.
-
Sorghum Syrup - The stalks of the cereal grass sorghum can be
boiled down to produce a thick syrup
which can be used as a table syrup and
to sweeten baked goods. Also called
"sorghum molasses."
-
Sorrel - Any of several varieties of the hardy
perennial herb from the buckwheat
family. Also known as "dock." The most
strongly flavored variety is "sour
dock." The mildest form is called "dock
sorrel," also known as "herb patience
dock."
-
SOS
- Shefford Old Strong
- is a malty, fruity real
ale from B&T,
Bedfordshire.
-
Soufflé -
A light, airy mixture that is normally
made by taking an egg yolk-based sauce
that has been lightened by adding
stiffly beaten egg whites. Souffles may
be sweet or savory and served cold or
hot.
-
Souffle
is a dish, either sweet or savoury, the
essential ingredient of which
is
egg white beaten to a froth.
-
Sour Cream - Also known as "dairy sour cream." This
commercial product is made from
homogenized pasteurized sweet cream to
which a dairy culture has been added for
souring.
-
Soursop - The large, dark-green, slightly acidic and
pulpy flesh of the fruit of a small West
Indies tree called the soursop. Also
called "guanabana."
-
Souse Loaf - Well-cooked pig's head and feet that are
chopped into small pieces, marinated in
lime juice, chili pepper and salt, then
pressed into a loaf.
-
Southern Comfort
is an American
liqueur based upon
whisky flavoured with
peaches.
-
Soy Flour - A very high-protein, low carbohydrate flour
made from soybeans. Soy flour has
approximately twice the protein of wheat
flour.
-
Soy Milk - This milky, iron-rich liquid is the product of
pressing cooked and ground soybeans. Soy
milk is higher in protein than cow's
milk. It is cholesterol-free and low in
calcium, fat, and sodium.
-
Soy Sauce - A dark, salty sauce made from fermenting
boiled soybeans and roasted wheat or
barley. Extremely popular in the Orient;
used to flavor fish, meat, marinades,
sauces, soups, and vegetables.
-
Soybean - The world's most important bean is the low
carbohydrate, high-protein soybean. This
inexpensive, yet nutritious legume is
used to make soybean oil, soy flour, soy
sauce, miso, tamari, and tofu. Can also
be used like any other bean.
-
Soybean Curd Cake - A low-calorie, high-protein, cholesterol-free
food made from curdled soy milk. It is
creamy white with a firmness that varies
from soft to firm. Should be kept
refrigerated. The water it is packed in
should be changed daily.
-
Soybean Oil - An inexpensive oil that is nutritious and has
a high smoke point. Soybean oil is
approximately 58% polyunsaturated fat,
23% monounsaturated, and 15% saturated
fat. Used extensively in making
margarine and shortening.
-
Spaghetti - Like its cousin "macaroni," spaghetti is made
from semolina and water. Sometimes eggs
are added. The name comes from the
italian word for "strings."
-
Spaghetti Squash - This creamy-yellow watermelon-shaped squash is
so named because its flesh, when cooked,
separates into yellow-gold
spaghetti-like strands. Avoid greenish
squash (indicating immaturity).
-
Spaghettini - A thin form of the spaghetti pasta. It is not
quite as thin as vermicelli, however.
Other spaghettis include "fettuccine"
and "linguine," which are flat rather
than round.
-
Spinach - An annual potherb from southwestern Asia grown
for its leafy green leaves. Spinach can
be used raw, or cooked by boiling or
sautéing. Its leaves contains small
amounts of oxalic acid which gives
spinach a slightly bitter flavor.
-
Spinnaker bitter
is a smooth, hoppy
ale, one of the
Brewery-on-Sea's range of cask beers.
Brewed at
Lancing,
Sussex.
-
Spitfire
is an amber-coloured, mild,
smoky
malt
ale from the
Shepherd Neame brewery,
Kent.
-
Split Peas - A variety of yellow or green field pea that is
grown specifically for drying. These
peas are often dried and split along a
natural seam, whereupon they are called
"split peas" and are used in soups and
other dishes.
-
Sponge Gourd - The fruit of any of several tropical vines of
the gourd family. The dried insides of
these gourds can be used as a sponge.
Also called the "Luffah."
-
Spot - A small fish (approximately 1.5 pounds) belonging to the
drum family. In 1925, these fish
appeared in New York harbor in such vast
numbers that they clogged the condenser
pumps of the electric company and caused
a blackout.
-
Spruce beer
is an alcoholic beverage prepared by
boiling
sugar with essence of
spruce, cooling and
fermenting with
yeast. It was popular in
Canada in the timber regions
during the early 20th century.
-
Squab - A young domesticated pigeon that has never
flown and is therefore very tender.
Squabs are normally under a pound and
about 4 weeks old. May be prepared in
any manner suitable for chicken.
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Squash Seeds - The edible seeds of the pumpkin. These seeds
are hulled to reveal a green seed with a
delicate nutty flavor. These seeds are
often roasted and salted. Also called
"pepitas," these seeds are popular in
Mexican cookery.
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Squid - This ten-armed cephalopod is related to the
octopus and the cuttlefish. Squid varies
in size from 1 inch to 80 feet in
length. The meat is firm and chewy, with
a somewhat sweet flavor. Over-cooking
can lead to a rubbery texture.
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Squirrel - An abundant, largely arboreal rodent. Red and
gray squirrels are commonly eaten in the
U.S. The gray squirrel is fatter and has
a flavor considered by many as superior
to the red squirrel. Squirrels do not
have a strong "gamey" taste.
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Stabber's
is a brown, strong
bitter with a rich, malty
navour from the Ryburn brewery, West
Yorkshire.
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Stag is a light-brown,
malty, sweet
bitter from the
Exmoor brewery in
Wiveliscombe,
Somerset.
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Star Apple - The purple, white, green, yellow, or
rose-colored fruit of a West Indian
tree. When cut open, the seeds are
disposed into the shape of a star. Also
called "caimit."
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Steaming
is the practice of cooking by indirect
moist heat.
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Steeplejack
is a light-brown cask
bitter with a
fresh, hoppy
taste, from the Lichfield
brewery in the
Midlands.
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Stewing
is a method of cooking somewhat similar
to boiling. Less water is used, however,
and the juices and food values are drawn
out, whereas in boiling they are sealed
in. It is an economical but slow method
of cooking meat.
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Stig swig
is a golden, seasonal
ale brewed by Bunces brewery,
Wiltshire, using the
herb Sweet
Gale (bog-myrtle) , an old
Viking ingredient.
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Stilton
is an English, strong
cheese named after the
village of Stilton, but actually first
made in
Leicestershire.
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Stir-Fry -
Any dish that has been prepared by
stir-frying. That is, the food is
chopped into small pieces and cooked
very quickly over high heat in a large
pan for a short period of time while
briskly stirring the food.
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Stones Bitter
is a famous straw-coloured
bitter with a sweet,
malt and
hops flavour. It was
introduced by the Cannon
Sheffield brewery in the
1940s.
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Strawberry - This hardy member of the rose family is a red,
juicy sweet-tart berry. The French
"European Alpine" strawberries are tiny,
very sweet berries and are considered
the finest. Eaten out-of-hand, used in
wines, liqueurs, and in desserts.
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Strega is an Italian
liqueur so called because it
is supposedly based upon a witch's
recipe for an aphrodisiac which will
bind two lovers together for
ever (Strega is Italian for Witch). It
is a yellow, syrupy,
citrus based drink with a
complex blend of herbs.
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String Bean - A small bean that is eaten in its long green
pod. Named after the fibrous "string"
that used to grow down the center of the
pod; this characteristic has since been
bred out of the species. Also called
"green beans" and "snap beans."
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Striped Bass - This true bass is found along the Atlantic
coast. It features six to eight
horizontal stripes and provides a
moderately fat, firm flesh with a mild,
sweet flavor.
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Stroganoff - A dish of thinly sliced beef (usually
tenderloin or top loin), onions, and
mushrooms sautéed in a combination of
butter and sour-cream sauce. Often
served with a rice pilaf. Invented by
Count Paul Stroganoff in the 19th
century.
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Strong Suffolk
is an intriguing, unique, complex
bottled
ale which comes from
Greene King brewery of East
Anglia. It is produced by blending an
old ale that has been matured in
oak vats for at least two
years with a
fresh brew of dark beer.
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Strongarm
is Camerons premium
ruby
bitter with a smooth, creamy
head from Hartlepool. It was originally
brewed for the steelworkers of Teesside.
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Stronghart
is a rich, dark, strong beer produced by
the
McMullen brewery in
Hertford.
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Strudel - This German word for "whirlpool" refers to a
pastry made of layers of thin dough
spread with a filling, then rolled up
and baked. The extremely thin pastry
resembles Phyllo.
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Stuffing -
A mixture of seasoned breadcrumbs,
cornbread, rice, potatoes, or other food
item used to stuff fish, meat, poultry,
shellfish, and sometimes, vegetables.
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Sturgeon - A name for various migratory species of fish
know for its rich, high-fat flavor, firm
texture, and excellent roe. Their
average weight is 60 pounds, but one
freshwater "Beluga" sturgeon was 26 feet
long and weighed 3,221 pounds.
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Succotash - A dish composed of a combination of lima beans
and corn.
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Sucker - A name popularly applied to various types of
freshwater fish closely related to carp.
Suckers live and feed near the bottoms
of streams. They may be cooked in any
way appropriate for other fish.
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Suet is the fatty
tissue surrounding the
kidneys of oxen and
sheep. It is used in cooking.
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Sugar Beet - A type of beet with a very high sugar content
that is cultivated primarily for making
sugar. Most varieties of sugar beet are
white inside and out and can be cooked
and eaten as a vegetable, just like
ordinary garden beets.
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Sugar Cane - A tall grass of tropical and warm regions with
tough, jointed stalks that can be
processed to produce sugar.
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Sugar is a sweet, soluble
carbohydrate.
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Sugar Substitute - Also called "non-nutritive sweeteners," sugar
substitutes are used by persons with
reasons for avoiding or restricting
their intake of sugar. "Saccharin" and
"aspartame" are two common sugar
substitutes.
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