Quail eggs are eaten and considered a delicacy in many parts of the world, including Asia, Europe, and North America. In Japanese cuisine, they are sometimes used raw or cooked as tamago in sushi and often found in bento lunches.
In some other countries, eggs of quail are considered less exotic. In Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador and Venezuela, a single hard-boiled quail egg is a common topping on hot dogs and hamburgers, often fixed into place with a toothpick. In the Philippines, kwek-kwek is a popular street food delicacy, which consists of soft-boiled quail eggs dipped in orange-colored batter before being skewered and deep-fried. In Indonesia, small packages of hardboiled quail eggs are sold by street vendors as snacks, and skewered quail eggs are sold as satay to accompany main dishes such as soto and bubur ayam. In Vietnam, bags of boiled quail eggs are sold on street stalls as inexpensive beer snacks. In South Korea, large, inexpensive bags of boiled quail eggs are sold in grocery stores. Quail eggs are a little thicker than normal eggs because they have an extra layer of thickness where the colour sits.(clarification needed)
  • Pickled and smoked quail eggs at Noma restaurant in Copenhagen
  • Raw quail egg yolk served over chunks of maguro (raw bluefin tuna) at a sushi restaurant in Naugatuck
  • Skewered quail eggs and chicken offal satays in Indonesia
  • Kwek kwek, deep fried quail eggs in batter, a popular street food snack in the Philippines

Contained by: Cojonudaes Cojonudoes
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Wikidata ID: Q1572135
Wikipedia title: Quail eggs
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