An empanada is a type of baked or fried turnover consisting of pastry and filling, common in Spanish, other Southern European, Latin American, and Iberian-influenced cultures around the world. The name comes from the Spanish empanar, and translates as 'breaded', that is, wrapped or coated in bread. They are made by folding dough over a filling, which may consist of meat, cheese, tomato, corn, or other ingredients, and then cooking the resulting turnover, either by baking or frying.
Empanada
Spanish
baked or fried turnover consisting of pastry and filling
Characteristic of:
Argentinian cuisine
Belizean cuisine
Chilean cuisine
Ecuadorian cuisine
Filipino cuisine
Galician cuisine
Indonesian cuisine
Italian cuisine
Latin American cuisine
Mexican cuisine
Paraguayan cuisine
Portuguese cuisine
Puerto Rican cuisine
Spanish cuisine
Uruguayan cuisine
Venezuelan cuisine
Subcategories:
Empanaditas
Contains, including ancestors:
Meat
Also known as:
Wikidata ID:
Q747457
Wikipedia title:
Empanada
References:
Inbound Links
Unlinked Mentions
Article content licensed under CC-BY-SA; original content from Wikimedia Foundation; image data under CC-BY-SA from Wikimedia Foundation
ID: 13106