Tabasco$81331$ - tradução para Inglês
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Tabasco$81331$ - tradução para Inglês

VARIETY OF CHILI PEPPER
Tabasco chile; Tabasco chili; Tabasco peppers
  • Tabasco pepper on its bush in the [[Bergianska botanical gardens]], Stockholm, 2013

Tabasco      
n. Tabasco, Schutzmarke einer scharfen Soße aus scharfer roter Paprika zubereitet
Mexican restaurant         
  • Hidalgo]]. The barbecue in a ground oven is a typical dish from the Mezquital Valley.
  • A ''cabrito'' (goat) on a spit in Monterrey, Nuevo León.
  • [[Carne a la tampiqueña]]
  • arrachera]]'', [[shrimp]], [[sausage]], onions, potatoes and ''chiles toreados'' served on an iron skillet.
  • [[Champurrado]], Mexican chocolate-based drink
  • Chiles rellenos]], stuffed chile peppers.
  • Mexican chocolate discs
  • Cochito, a dish exclusive to Chiapas.
  • Mexico is among the countries that produce the most [[honey]] in the world.
  • [[Enchilada]]s with [[tasajo]] beef.
  • [[Mexican juice bar]]
  • Still-life with Fruit, Scorpion and Frog (1874) by [[Hermenegildo Bustos]].
  • Hot chocolate and [[pan dulce]] are the quintessential breakfast in Mexico. Many of Mexico's sweet breads were influenced by French immigrants.
  • red snapper]].
  • A reconstructed kitchen at the 16th century former monastery of San Miguel Arcángel, [[Huejotzingo]], Puebla.
  • ''[[Chocolate]]'' being poured at a market at [[Villa de Etla]], Oaxaca
  • date=October 2010}}</ref>
  • A [[molcajete]] and tejolote, the traditional [[mortar and pestle]] of Mexico.
  • access-date=27 September 2016}}</ref> and is considered Mexico's [[national dish]].<ref name="Mole"/>
  • poblano rajas]]. Adobo, including a key item, [[vinegar]], arrived with the Spanish. A common characteristic of Mexican adobo is its incorporation of [[chile ancho]].
  • [[Chilaquiles]]
  • A taco stand in the [[Tacubaya]] neighborhood of Mexico City.
  • [[Tlayuda]]
  • ''Las Tortilleras'', an 1836 [[lithograph]] after a painting by [[Carl Nebel]] of women grinding corn and making tortillas.
  • Greek]] style BBQ taco with [[Feta cheese]].
CULINARY TRADITIONS OF MEXICO
Mexican food; Cuisine of Mexico; Mexcian food; Mexico Cuisine; Mexico cuisine; Mexican foods; Mexican restaurant; Cuisine of México; Food of Mexico; Mojarra frita; Mexican dishes; History of Mexican cuisine; Mexican regional cuisines; Mex-Mex; Mexican cooking; Mexican dessert; Pre-Hispanic Mexican cuisine; Regional cuisines of Mexico; Cuisine of Aguascalientes; Cuisine of Baja California; Cuisine of Chihuahua; Cuisine of Coahuila; Cuisine of Colima; Cuisine of Durango; Cuisine of Guerrero; Cuisine of Hidalgo (state); Cusiine of Hidalgo (state); Cuisine of Mexico (state); Cuisine of Michoacán; Cuisine of Morelos; Cuisine of Nayarit; Cuisine of Nuevo León; Cuisine of Puebla; Cuisine of Querétaro; Cuisine of San Luis Potosí; Cuisine of Sinaloa; Cuisine of Sorona; Cuisine of Tabasco; Cuisine of Tamaulipas; Cuisine of Tlaxcala; Cuisine of Yucatán; Cuisine of Zacatecas; Cuisine of Campeche; Alcohol in Mexico
mexikanisches Restaurant

Definição

Tabasco
Tabasco is a hot spicy sauce made from peppers. (TRADEMARK)
N-UNCOUNT

Wikipédia

Tabasco pepper

The tabasco pepper is a variety of the chili pepper species Capsicum frutescens originating in Mexico. It is best known through its use in Tabasco sauce, followed by peppered vinegar.

Like all C. frutescens cultivars, the tabasco plant has a typical bushy growth, which commercial cultivation makes stronger by trimming the plants. The tapered fruits, around 4 cm long, are initially pale yellowish-green and turn yellow and orange before ripening to bright red. Tabascos rate from 30,000 to 50,000 on the Scoville scale of heat levels, and are the only variety of chili pepper whose fruits are "juicy", i.e., not dry on the inside. Tabasco fruits, like all other members of the C. frutescens species, remain upright when mature, rather than hanging down from their stems.

A large part of the tabasco pepper stock fell victim to the tobacco mosaic virus in the 1960s; the first resistant variety (Greenleaf tabasco) was not cultivated until around 1970.