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List of hors d'oeuvre
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This is a list of notable hors d'oeuvre, also referred to as appetizers or starters, which may be served either hot or cold. They are food items served before the main courses of a meal, and are also sometimes served at the dinner table as a part of a meal. Many cultures serve dips, such as baba ghanoush, chili con queso, hummus, and tzatziki with bread or vegetables as hors d'oeuvre.
If the period between when guests arrive and when the meal is eaten (for example during a cocktail hour) is extended these might also serve the purpose of sustaining guests during the wait, in the same way that apéritifs are served as a drink before meals. Hors d'oeuvre are sometimes served with no meal afterward; this is the case with many reception and cocktail party events.
Hors d'oeuvre
| Name | Image | Origin | Description | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Angels on horseback | [[File:Angels on horseback.jpg | 120px]] | England | Oysters wrapped in bacon, served hot: In the United Kingdom, they can also be a savoury, the final course of a traditional British formal meal. They are somewhat similar to devils on horseback and the Midwestern version of pigs in a blanket, a traditional dish of the American Midwest. | ||||||||
| *Antipasto* | [[File:Antipasto all'italiana.jpg | 120px]] | Italy | The traditional first course of a formal Italian meal: Traditional antipasto includes cured meats, olives, peperoncini, mushrooms, anchovies, artichoke hearts, various cheeses (such as provolone or mozzarella), and pickled meats and vegetables (both in oil or in vinegar). | ||||||||
| Arab salad | [[File:Arabsalad.jpg | 120px]] | Middle East | Any of a variety of salad dishes that form part of Arab cuisine | ||||||||
| *Bakwan* | [[File:Cabbage fritters gorengan.JPG | 120px]] | Indonesia | A vegetable fritter snack—fried meal consisting of vegetables and batter. The ingredients are vegetables; usually beansprouts, shredded cabbages and carrots, battered and deep fried in cooking oil | ||||||||
| *Batagor* | [[File:Batagor Savoy Homann Bandung.jpg | 120px]] | Indonesia | A traditional dumpling consisting of fried fish dumplings, usually served with peanut sauce. This appetizer usually served with fried tofu and finger-shaped fried otak-otak fish cakes. | ||||||||
| *Batata vada* | [[File:Mumbai-vada.jpg | 120px]] | India | A popular Indian vegetarian fast food in Maharashtra, India, it literally means "potato fritters". The Marathi word *batata* means potato in English. It consists of a potato mash patty coated with chick pea flour, then deep-fried and served hot with savory condiments called chutney. The *vada* is a disc, around 2 to in diameter. | ||||||||
| *Barbajuan* | [[File:Barbaguiai.jpg | 120px]] | Monaco | An appetizer mainly found in the eastern part of French Riviera and Northern Italy, a barbajuan is a fritter filled with Swiss chard, spinach, and ricotta cheese, among other ingredients. | ||||||||
| Blooming onion | [[File:Blooming onion.jpg | 120px]] | United States | Typically, this consists of one large onion which is cut to resemble a flower, then battered and deep-fried. It is served as an appetizer at some restaurants. | ||||||||
| *Bruschetta* | [[File:Tomato Bruschetta.jpg | 120px]] | Italy | An Italian antipasto, its origin dates to at least the 15th century. It consists of grilled bread rubbed with garlic and topped with olive oil, salt, and pepper. It is often topped with tomato. | ||||||||
| Buffalo wing | [[File:Buffalo wings-01.jpg | 120px]] | United States | A chicken wing section (wingette or drumette) that is generally deep-fried, unbreaded, and coated in a sauce of vinegar-based cayenne pepper, hot sauce, and butter in the kitchen. | ||||||||
| *Canapé* | [[File:Canape tray.jpg | 120px]] | France | A small, prepared and usually decorative food, held in the fingers and often eaten in one bite | ||||||||
| *Carpaccio* | [[File:Beef Carpaccio, Restaurant, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydnay, 2021.jpg | 120px]] | Italy | Raw meat (such as beef, veal, venison, salmon, or tuna), thinly sliced or pounded thin, and served mainly as an appetizer: Pictured is carpaccio with cheese. | ||||||||
| Caviar | [[File:Caviar and spoon.jpg | 120px]] | Iran, Russia | Traditionally, it refers to roe from wild sturgeon in the Caspian and Black Seas. Can also denote roe from American White Sturgeon. | ||||||||
| Charcuterie board | [[File:-365photo 2017 edition Food (32033206853).jpg | 120px]] | Europe | An assortment of charcuterie (cured meats), and complementary cheeses, fruits, vegetables, nuts, and spreads arranged on a wooden board or stone slab | ||||||||
| Cheese and crackers | [[File:HK CWB 香港怡東酒店 Excelsior Hotel Cheese Biscuit Dec-2011.jpg | 120px]] | United Kingdom, North America | Various cheeses and crackers paired together, typically served at parties or gatherings | ||||||||
| Chicken fingers | [[File:Crispy Chicken Strips - FotoosVanRobin.jpg | 120px]] | United States | Chicken fingers are prepared by dipping chicken meat in a breading mixture and then deep-frying them. They are typically served with sauce, which can be ketchup, ranch, barbecue or a honey mustard. In North America, they are usually prepared from the breast muscles of chicken. | ||||||||
| Chicken lollipop | [[File:Chicken lollipop in Goa.jpg | 120px]] | Indo-Chinese | An hors d'œuvre made from the drumette segments of chicken wings or from drumsticks. The flesh on the segments is pushed to one end of the bone. | ||||||||
| Crab puff | [[File:Crab puffs (cropped).jpg | 120px]] | United States | Balls of crab meat that have been deep-fried in batter They are often served in restaurants as an appetizer or side dish. | ||||||||
| Crab rangoon | [[File:CrabRangoon.jpg | 120px]] | United States | These are deep-fried dumplings served in American Chinese, and more recently, Thai restaurants, stuffed with a combination of cream cheese, lightly flaked crab meat (more commonly, canned crab meat or imitation crab meat), with scallions and/or garlic. | ||||||||
| *Crostini* | [[File:Crostini by Charles Haynes.jpg | 120px]] | Italy | Small slices of grilled or toasted bread and toppings, which may include a variety of different cheeses, meats, and vegetables, or may be presented more simply with a brush of olive oil and herbs or a sauce | ||||||||
| *Crudités* | [[File:Crudites Platter.JPG | 120px]] | France | author=Jessica | url=http://www.frenchvegetables.com/what-are-the-crudites/ | title=What Are The Crudités? | publisher=Frenchvegetables.com | date=2012-12-05 | access-date=2013-04-04 | url-status=usurped | archive-url=https://archive.today/20130123234120/http://www.frenchvegetables.com/what-are-the-crudites/ | archive-date=2013-01-23 }} which are sometimes dipped in a vinaigrette or other dipping sauce |
| Deep-fried avocado | [[File:Fried avocado with dipping sauce.jpg | 120px]] | California, United States | Also known as avocado fries. Wedges of avocado either breaded or battered and deep fried in oil, seasoned with salt, and served with a dipping sauce | ||||||||
| Deviled eggs | [[File:Deviled egg closeup.jpg | 120px]] | England Spain | Boiled eggs, shelled, cut in half, and filled with the yolk mixed with other ingredients such as mayonnaise and mustard, but many other variants exist internationally. | ||||||||
| Devils on horseback | [[File:Devils on Horseback.jpg | 120px]] | England | A hot hors d'oeuvre. The recipes vary, but in general are variations on angels on horseback, made by replacing oysters with dried fruit. The majority of recipes contains a pitted date (though prunes are sometimes used,) stuffed with mango chutney and wrapped in bacon. | ||||||||
| Eggplant salads and appetizers | [[File:Baba Ganouj (4009288211).jpg | 120px]] | Many cuisines feature eggplant salads and appetizers. | |||||||||
| *Fattoush* | [[File:Fattoush.JPG | 120px]] | The Levant | A Levantine bread salad made from toasted or fried pieces of pita bread (*khubz 'arabi*) combined with mixed greens and other vegetables, *fattoush* belongs to the family of dishes known as *fattat* (plural) or *fatta*, which use stale flatbread as a base. | ||||||||
| Fried mushrooms | [[File:Fried mushrooms with sauces (cropped).jpg | 120px]] | Deep-fried mushrooms, they have been dipped in batter. In the United States and some other countries, they are often served as an appetizer or snack. | |||||||||
| Garlic knot | [[File:Garlic knots.jpg | 120px]] | United States | A type of garlic bread appetizer, they are found in many pizzerias around the world. They are usually made with pizza dough, and garlic (or garlic powder). They can also be topped with Parmesan cheese, oregano, and/or parsley. | ||||||||
| *Gravlax* | [[File:Gravlax on crackers with pepper and lemon.jpg | 120px]] | Nordic countries | Raw salmon, cured in salt, sugar, and dill,* gravlax *is usually served as an appetizer, sliced thinly and accompanied by *hovmästarsås* (literally "steward sauce", also known as *gravlaxsås* or *rævesovs*), a dill and mustard sauce, either on bread of some kind or with boiled potatoes. | ||||||||
| Jalapeño popper | [[File:Cooking-food-stuffed-jalapenos-peppers.jpg | 120px]] | United States | These are jalapeño peppers that have been hollowed out, stuffed with a mixture of cheese, spices, and sometimes ground meat. They are either breaded and deep-fried or wrapped in bacon, and baked or grilled. | ||||||||
| *Ketoprak* | [[File:Ketoprak Boplo.JPG | 120px]] | Indonesia | A vegetarian dish consisting of tofu, vegetables, rice cake, and rice vermicelli served in peanut sauce. | ||||||||
| *Kinilaw* | [[File:Kagay-anon_Kinilaw.jpg | 120px]] | Philippines | A raw seafood dish and preparation method native to the Philippines, prepared using raw cubed fish mixed with vinegar (usually coconut vinegar or cane vinegar) as the primary denaturing agent; along with a souring agent to enhance the tartness like calamansi, *dayap*, *biasong*, *kamias*, tamarind, green mangoes, *balimbing*, and green *sineguelas*. It is flavored with salt and spices like black pepper, ginger, onions, and chili peppers (commonly *siling labuyo* or bird's eye chili). | ||||||||
| *Kuku sabzi* | [[File: Kuku_Sabzi_(Iranian_food).jpg | 120px]] | Iran | Herb kuku, or kuku sabzi in Persian, is the most common type of kuku. It is made of eggs and herbs such as leeks and parsley. Garlic, which is especially popular in the northern regions of Iran, is also used as an ingredient. | ||||||||
| *Lumpia* | [[File:Lumpia from Lumpia Shack in New York, NY.jpg | 120px]] | Philippines | Various types of spring roll made of thin paper-like or crepe-like pastry skin called "lumpia wrapper" enveloping savory or sweet fillings. It is available in fried or unfried variants. | ||||||||
| *Malakoff* | [[File:Malakoff.jpeg | 120px]] | Switzerland (Romandy) | A fried ball of cheese. | ||||||||
| *Martabak* | [[File:MartabakTelur.JPG | 120px]] | Indonesia | A stuffed pancake or pan-fried bread. This appetizer is spicy folded omelette pancake with bits of vegetables, sometimes mixed with green onion and minced meat, made from pan fried crepes which is folded and cut to squares. | ||||||||
| *Matbucha* | [[File:2008 04 23 - Laurel - Sauce.JPG | 120px]] | Middle East, Arab culture | Tomatoes and roasted bell peppers seasoned with garlic and chili pepper, the name of the dish originates from Arabic and means "cooked [salad]". It is served as an appetizer, often as part of a *meze*. | ||||||||
| *Meze* | [[File:Petra metzes.jpg | 120px]] | Middle East, Balkans, Caucasus | In Levantine cuisines and in the Caucasus region, *meze* is served at the beginning of all large-scale meals, | ||||||||
| Mozzarella sticks | [[File:Wishbone (41699552332).jpg | 120px]] | United States | Elongated pieces of battered or breaded mozzarella | ||||||||
| Nachos | [[File:Nachos-cheese.jpg | 120px]] | Piedras Negras, Coahuila, Mexico | In their simplest form, nachos are tortilla chips (*totopos*) covered in nacho cheese or shredded cheese and/or salsa. | ||||||||
| *Obložené chlebíčky* | [[File:Chlebicky.JPG | 120px]] | Czech Republic, Slovakia | A Czech and Slovak appetizer or snack, it consists of an open-faced sandwich topped with butter and a variety of other toppings, such as cured meats, fish, hard-boiled egg, and vegetables. | ||||||||
| Onion ring | [[File:OnionRings.JPG | 120px]] | United Kingdom | Generally, it consist of a cross-sectional "ring" of onion (the circular structure of which lends itself well to this method of preparation) dipped in batter or bread crumbs and then deep-fried; a variant is made with onion paste. | ||||||||
| *Samosa* | [[File:Samosachutney.jpg | 120px]] | Middle East, South Asia | author1=Arnold P. Kaminsky | author2=Roger D. Long | title=India Today: An Encyclopedia of Life in the Republic | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=wWDnTWrz4O8C&pg=PA151 | access-date=22 April 2012 | date=23 September 2011 | publisher=ABC-CLIO | isbn=978-0-313-37462-3 | page=151}} They are a popular appetizer or snack in South Asia, Southeast Asia, Central Asia, Southwest Asia, the Arabian Peninsula, the Mediterranean, the Horn of Africa, North Africa, and South Africa. |
| *Pakora* | [[File:Chilli Bites (Bhaji).jpg | 120px]] | India | It is created by taking one or two ingredients such as onion, eggplant, potato, spinach, plantain, *paneer*, cauliflower, tomato, chili pepper, or occasionally bread or chicken and dipping them in a batter of gram flour and then deep-frying them. The most popular varieties are *palak pakora*, made from spinach, *paneer pakora*, made from paneer (soft cheese), *pyaz pakora*, made from onion, and *aloo pakora*, made from potato. | ||||||||
| *Haggis pakora* | [[File:Haggis pakora.jpg | 120px]] | Scotland | An Indo-Gael fusion food. Haggis (sheep's heart, liver and lungs, onion, oatmeal) is flavored with Indian spices, formed into balls, coated in a batter of gram flour, yogurt and spices, and deep-fried in the same manner as an Indian* pakora.* | ||||||||
| *Paneer tikka* | [[File:Panir Tikka Indian cheese grilled.jpg | 120px]] | India | last=Dalal | first=Tarla | title=Punjabi Khana | year=2007 | publisher=Sanjay & Co | isbn=978-8189491543 | page=29}} it is a vegetarian alternative to chicken tikka and other meat dishes. It is a popular dish that is widely available in India and other countries with an Indian diaspora. | ||
| *Panipuri* | [[File:Indian cuisine-Panipuri-03.jpg | 120px]] | India | A popular street snack in India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, and Nepal, it consists of a round, hollow *puri*, fried crisp, and filled with a mixture of flavored water (*pani*), tamarind chutney), chili, *chaat masala*, potato, onion, and chickpeas. It is generally small enough to fit completely into one's mouth. It is a popular street food dish in Mumbai, Delhi, Karachi, Lahore, Dhaka, Kolkata, and Kathmandu. | ||||||||
| *Papadum* | [[File:Papadsbangalore.jpg | 120px]] | India | A thin, crisp Indian preparation, it is sometimes described as a cracker. It is typically served as an accompaniment to a meal in India. It is also eaten as an appetizer or a snack and can be eaten with various toppings such as chopped onions, chutney, or other dips and condiments. | ||||||||
| *Chaat* | [[File:Bhalla Papri Chaat with saunth chutney.jpg | 120px]] | India | Chaat is a term describing one of many types of savory snacks, typically served at road-side tracks from stalls or food carts in India. | ||||||||
| *Papri chaat* | [[File:Bhalla Papri Chaat with saunth chutney.jpg | 120px]] | India | A Pakistani and North Indian fast food, chaat, an Indo-Aryan word which literally means *lick*, is used to describe a range of snacks and fast food dishes; *papri* refers to crisp fried dough wafers made from refined white flour and oil. In *papri chaat*, the *papris *are served with boiled potatoes, boiled chick peas, chilis, yogurt, and tamarind chutney, and topped with *chaat masala* and *sev*. | ||||||||
| * Dahi puri* | [[File:Dahi puri, Doi phuchka.jpg | 120px]] | India | An Indian snack which is especially popular in the state of Maharashtra, the dish is a form of *chaat* and originates from the city of Mumbai. It is served with mini-*puri* shells (*golgappa*), which are more popularly recognized from the dish *golgappay*. * Dahi puri* and *pani puri chaats* are often sold by the same vendor. | ||||||||
| *Dahi vada* | [[File:Dahi Vadas (Dhai Bhalla).JPG | 120px]] | India | An Indian *chaat* prepared by soaking *vadas* in thick *dahi* (yogurt). To add more flavor, they may be topped with coriander or mint leaves, chili powder, crushed black pepper, *chaat masala*, cumin, shredded coconut, green chilis, or *boondi*. | ||||||||
| *Serabi* | [[File:Serabi kuno dan alat masaknya.jpg | 120px]] | Indonesia | A traditional pancake that is made from rice flour with coconut milk or shredded coconut as an emulsifier. Most of traditional serabi tastes sweet, as the pancake is usually eaten with kinca or thick golden-brownish-colored coconut sugar syrup. | ||||||||
| *Perkedel* | [[File:Perkedel.JPG | 120px]] | Indonesia | Fried patties, made of ground potatoes, minced meat, peeled and ground corn or tofu, or minced fish. Most common perkedel are made from mashed potatoes. | ||||||||
| Pigs in a blanket | [[File:2022-04-07 00 50 24 A pig in a blanket in the Dulles section of Sterling, Loudoun County, Virginia.jpg | 120px]] | United States and Great Britain | A snack or hors d'oeuvre in a variety of countries consisting of a small sausage wrapped in pastry or bacon. | ||||||||
| *Picada* | [[File:Picada cordobesa.jpg | 120px]] | Argentina and Uruguay | A serving of savory snack and finger foods, including cheeses, cured meats, fermented sausages, olives and peanuts. | ||||||||
| *Pizzetta* | [[File:Pizzetta.jpg | 120px]] | A miniature pizza, it is prepared in a similar fashion, but is only a few inches in diameter. | |||||||||
| *Poke* | [[File:Tako Poke.jpg | 120px]] | United States (Hawaii) | A raw salad served as an hors d'œuvre in Hawaiian cuisine. Modern *poke* typically consists of cubed *ahi* (yellowfin tuna) sashimi marinated with sea salt, a small amount of soy sauce,* inamona* (roasted crushed candlenut), sesame oil, *limu* seaweed, and chopped chili pepper. | ||||||||
| Potato skins | [[File:Potato skins.jpg | 120px]] | United States | Slices of half-circular pieces of potatoes with the skin left on one side and a quarter-inch or so of the inside of the potato on the other, the potato side is covered with toppings such as bacon, cheddar cheese, green onions, and anything else that might be found on a baked potato. | ||||||||
| Potato wedges | [[File:Jo Jos.JPG | 120px]] | Wedges of potatoes, often large and unpeeled, that are either baked or fried | |||||||||
| Prawn cocktail | [[File:Cocktail 1 bg 060702.jpg | 120px]] | United States, United Kingdom | A seafood dish, it consists of "shelled prawns in mayonnaise and tomato dressing, served in a glass", also referred to as a shrimp cocktail. | ||||||||
| *Pu pu* platter | [[File:Pupuplatter.jpg | 120px]] | United States | An assortment of small meat and seafood appetizers, a typical pupu platter, as found in American Chinese cuisine, might include an egg roll, spare ribs, chicken wings, chicken fingers, beef teriyaki, skewered beef, fried wontons, crab rangoon, and fried shrimp, among other items, accompanied by a small hibachi grill. | ||||||||
| *Queso flameado* | [[File:Queso Flameado de Oaxaca.jpg | 120px]] | Mexico, | |||||||||
| United States (Southwest) | Its typical main ingredients are melted cheese and a characteristic meat sauce of loose fresh chorizo, tomato, onion, chili, and spices. | |||||||||||
| Rocky Mountain oysters | [[File:Rocky mountain oysters.jpg | 120px]] | North America | Bull calf testicles used for human consumption, it is a well-known novelty dish in parts of the American West and Western Canada where cattle ranching is prevalent and castration of young animals is common ("prairie oysters" is the preferred name in Canada, where they may be served in a *demi-glace*, not deep-fried). In Oklahoma and the Texas Panhandle, they are sometimes called calf fries, but only if taken from very young animals. | ||||||||
| *Rumaki* | [[File:Duck rumaki.jpg | 120px]] | mock-Polynesian | Water chestnuts and liver wrapped in bacon (or, as a substitute, either pastrami or cured salted beef [called "beef fry"]) and marinated in a flavored soy sauce | ||||||||
| *Saganaki* | [[File:Grekiska koket 02.jpg | 120px]] | Greece | Various Greek dishes prepared in a small frying pan, itself called a *saganaki*, they are best-known as being an appetizer of fried cheese. | ||||||||
| *Sakinalu*/*chakli* | [[File:Sakinalu, dark and light-2159.jpg | 120x120px]] | India | A special type of snack, they are prepared in Maharashtra, Karnataka and Telangana, and parts of Guntur District, and are very popular in all districts of Telangana Region. It is essentially made up of rice flour and with small amount of spices, sesame seeds, carom seeds (*ajwain*), and salt, prepared during Makar Sankranti festival by most people irrespective of caste and creed. *Sakinalu *are also given to the groom's by the bride's parents for distributing among their relatives and friends. | ||||||||
| Salmon tartare | [[File:Bristol Bay Salmon Tartare 0440 (7564711524).jpg | 120px]] | Prepared with fresh raw salmon and seasonings, it is commonly spread on a cracker or artisan-style bread and enjoyed as an appetizer. | |||||||||
| Stuffed mushrooms | [[File:Stuffed portabella mushrooms, June 2009.jpg | 120px]] | Mushrooms filled with a stuffing and baked or broiled | |||||||||
| *Sushi* | [[File:Western Sushi.jpg | 120px]] | Japan | Cooked vinegar-flavored rice combined with other ingredients, the *Oxford English Dictionary* notes the earliest written mention of sushi in English in an 1893 book, *A Japanese Interior*, where it mentions sushi as "a roll of cold rice with fish, seaweed, or some other flavoring". However, there is also mention of sushi in a Japanese-English dictionary from 1873, and an 1879 article on Japanese cookery in the journal *Notes and Queries*. | ||||||||
| *Tokwa’t baboy* | [[File:Tokwa't Baboy 2.jpg | 120px]] | Philippines | A typical Philippine appetizer, it usually includes pork ears, pork belly, and deep-fried tofu, and is dipped in a mixture of soy sauce, pork broth, vinegar, chopped white onions, scallions, and red chili peppers. | ||||||||
| *Zakuski* | [[File:Russian Celebration Zakuski.jpg | 120px]] | Russia | A Russian term for hors d'oeuvres, snacks, and appetizers, it is served before the main course. Usually presented buffet style, it often consists of cold cuts, cured fishes, mixed salads, *kholodets*, *pirozhki*, various pickled vegetables (such as tomatoes, beets, or cucumbers), sauerkraut, pickled mushrooms, deviled eggs, hard cheeses, caviar, *canapés*, open sandwiches, and breads. |
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