Revision as of 22:09, 4 December 2005 editInstantnood (talk | contribs)32,683 edits stirfried China? are you serious?← Previous edit | Revision as of 22:54, 4 December 2005 edit undoAlanmak (talk | contribs)Pending changes reviewers4,578 edits "I am talking to Instantnood and his brain." I have to mention "Instantnood" and "his brain", because "Instantnood" doesn't include "his brain". Does that make sense?Next edit → | ||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
'''Chinese sausage''' or '''''lap cheong''''' (]: 臘腸, ]: 腊肠; ] ]: lahp chéung, ]: laap6 cheong2; ] ]: làcháng |
'''Chinese sausage''' or '''''lap cheong''''' (]: 臘腸, ]: 腊肠; ] ]: lahp chéung, ]: laap6 cheong2; ] ]: làcháng) is a dried, hard ] usually made from ] meat and a high content of fat. It is normally smoked, sweetened and seasoned. It is used as a condiment in many stirfried ], and ], such as ] and ], a popular noodle dish in ] and ]. It is available in Chinese markets and ] shops. | ||
] also produces a similar form sausage, however it is not dried and a bit sweeter in taste. These sausages are usually made by local ]s and sold at the markets. Although much loved by Taiwanese everywhere, these sausages not commonly available outside the country. | ] also produces a similar form sausage, however it is not dried and a bit sweeter in taste. These sausages are usually made by local ]s and sold at the markets. Although much loved by Taiwanese everywhere, these sausages not commonly available outside the country. |
Revision as of 22:54, 4 December 2005
Chinese sausage or lap cheong (Traditional Chinese: 臘腸, Simplified Chinese: 腊肠; Cantonese Yale: lahp chéung, Jyutping: laap6 cheong2; Mandarin Pinyin: làcháng) is a dried, hard sausage usually made from pork meat and a high content of fat. It is normally smoked, sweetened and seasoned. It is used as a condiment in many stirfried southern China, and Southeast Asia, such as fried rice and char kway teow, a popular noodle dish in Malaysia and Singapore. It is available in Chinese markets and meat shops.
Taiwan also produces a similar form sausage, however it is not dried and a bit sweeter in taste. These sausages are usually made by local butchers and sold at the markets. Although much loved by Taiwanese everywhere, these sausages not commonly available outside the country.
This food-related article is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it. |