This is a list of notable dumplings. Dumpling is a broad class of dishes that consist of pieces of dough (made from a variety of starch sources) wrapped around a filling, or of dough with no filling.[1][2] The dough can be based on bread, flour or potatoes, and may be filled with meat, fish, cheese, vegetables, fruits or sweets. Dumplings may be prepared using a variety of methods, including baking, boiling, frying, simmering or steaming and are found in many world cuisines. Some definitions rule out baking and frying in order to exclude items like fritters and other pastries that are generally not regarded as dumplings by most individuals.[1]
Dumplings
A
- Abacus seeds – Hakka stir-fried taro dumplings
- Ada (food) – Regional traditional Indian sweet
- Agnolotti – Italian meat-filled pasta
- Akashiyaki – Japanese round dumpling with octopus filling
- Apple dumpling – Pastry-wrapped apple
- Arancini – Italian snack food
- Aushak – Afghan dish
B
- Ba-wan – Taiwanese street food
- Bánh bao – Vietnamese steamed bun
- Bánh chưng – Vietnamese rice cake
- Bánh lá – Stuffed leaf cake
- Bánh tẻ – Vietnamese steamed rice cakes
- Bánh tét – Vietnamese boiled rice cake
- Baozi – Filled bun in various Chinese and Chinese-influenced cuisines
- Beef Wellington – Filet steak with pâté and duxelles in puff pastry
- Blodpalt – Northern Finnish dumplings made with flour and blood
- Borș de burechiușe
- Bryndzové halušky – Traditional Slovak dish
- Burrito – Tex-Mex dish consisting of a wheat flour tortilla wrapped to enclose the filling
- Buuz – Type of Mongolian steamed meat dumpling
C
- Calzone – Baked Italian turnover
- Caozai guo – Glutinous rice dumplings colored green with herbs
- Cappelletti – Ring-shaped pasta stuffed with filling
- Capuns – Stuffed chard leaves from Swiss cuisine
- Cepelinai – Lithuanian potato dish
- Chapalele
- Chicken and dumplings – Chicken-based soup
- Chiburekki – Crimean Tatar deep-fried turnover
- Chor muang
- Chuchvara – Central Asian dumpling dish
- Ci fan tuan – Chinese glutinous rice dish
- Cilok – Indonesian tapioca balls snack from West Java
- Corn dog – Deep-fried, corn-battered hot dog on a stick
- Corunda – Mexican type of tamale
- Crab rangoon – American Chinese dumpling appetizers
- Croquette – Small breaded, deep-fried food
D
- Dampfnudel – German dumpling
- Dango – Japanese rice flour dumpling
- Dim sim – Chinese snack originating from Australia (Australian)
- Ducana
- Dushbara – Central Asian dumpling dish
E
- Empanada – Baked or fried turnover consisting of pastry and filling
F
G
- Germknödel – German and Austrian yeast dough dumpling
- Golden Syrup Dumplings
- Gnocchi – Small pasta-like dough dumplings
- Gnudi – Pasta dish
- Gondi dumpling – Persian Jewish dish
- Gong'a Momo – Dumpling in Tibetan and Nepali cuisine
- Gujia – Indian sweet dish
- Gulha – Tuna and coconut dumplings
- Gyoza – Chinese dumplings
H
- Hallaca – Dish from Venezuela
- Halušky – Eastern European dumpling or noodle dish
- Har gow – Cantonese food
- Hot Pocket – American brand of microwaveable food
- Hujiao bing – Chinese baked bun
I
- Idli – South Indian savoury rice cake
- Idrijski žlikrofi – Slovenian dumplings originating from Idrijski
J
- Jahodový
- Jamaican patty – Type of pastry
- Jau gok – Cantonese style dumplings
- Jiaozi – Chinese dumplings
- Joshpara – Central Asian dumpling dish
K
- Kalduny – Type of dumplings in Balto-Slavic cuisines
- Kenkey – Ground corn dumpling from West Africa
- Khinkali – Georgian dumpling
- Khuushuur – Mongolian fried meat pastry or dumpling
- Knödel – Large round poached or boiled potato or bread dumplings, made without yeast
- Kluski – Polish name for dumplings, noodles and pasta
- Knedle – Plum-filled potato dumplings
- Knish – Ashkenazi Polish baked or fried snack food consisting of a filling covered with dough
- Knoephla – Dumpling often used in soup
- Kopytka – Potato dumpling in Polish, Belarusian, and Lithuanian cuisines
- Kozhukkattai – Dumpling made from rice flour
- Kreplach – Traditional Jewish dumplings
- Kroppkaka – Swedish potato dumpling
- Kueh tutu – Singaporean steamed rice flour sweet snack
- Kuih kochi – Malaysian & Indonesian traditional dessert
- Kundumy – Type of dumplings in Balto-Slavic cuisines
- Kudmulu
L
- Leberknödel – Liver dumpling
- Lilva Kachori
- Lo mai gai – Cantonese leaf-wrapped dim sum
- Lukhmi – Type of samosa of Hyderabad, India
M
- Madombi
- Mandu – Korean dumplings
- Mandugwa – Korean sweet dumpling
- Manti – Type of dumpling popular in Central and West Asia
- Marillenknödel – Apricot dumplings from Central Europe
- Matzah ball – Soup dumpling in Jewish cuisine
- Maultasche – Traditional German dish
- Mitarashi dango – Japanese skewers with sweet soy sauce
- Mochi – Japanese rice cake
- Modak – Indian sweet dumpling dish
- Mohnnudel – Potato dish
- Momo – Dumpling in Tibetan and Nepali cuisine
- Mont phet htok – Pyramid rice dumpling
N
- Nagasari – Indonesian steamed cake
O
- Orama – Central Asian steamed pie
P
- Palt – Type of dumpling from Sweden
- Pamonha – Traditional Brazilian food
- Pancit Molo – Filipino pork dumpling soup
- Pantruca – Chilean soup with home-made noodles (pantrucas)
- Pasteles – Caribbean and Latin American dish
- Pasty – Cornish pastry filled with meat or vegetables
- Patoleo – sweet food from Goa
- Pavese agnolotti – Italian meat-filled pasta
- Pelmeni – Russian dumplings
- Pempek – Indonesian dish made of fish and tapioca
- Pickert – potato dish
- Pierogi – Unleavened stuffed pasta of Central and Eastern European origin
- Pitepalt – Swedish dish
- Pitha – Dessert from Bengal, Assam, Jharkhand and Odisha
- Pizza rolls – Food product
- Plum dumplings – Plum-filled potato dumplings
- Pop Tart – Brand of toaster pastries
- Pot Stickers – Chinese dumplings
- Poutine râpée – Traditional Acadian dumpling dish
- Pupusas – Salvadoran and Honduran dish
- Pundi
- Pyeonsu – Korean dumpling
Q
- Quenelle – Mixture of creamed fish or meat with a light egg binding, formed into an egg-like shape
R
S
- Samosa – Fried or baked pastry with a savoury filling
- Schupfnudel – Central European dumpling
- Scotch egg – Boiled egg wrapped in sausage meat
- Scovardă – Romanian pastry
- Sealed crustless sandwich – Mass produced sandwich foodstuff
- Shengjian mantou – A type of small, pan-fried baozi (steamed buns) which is a specialty of Shanghai
- Shishbarak – Central Asian dumpling dish
- Shlishkes
- Shumai – Type of traditional Chinese dumpling
- Siomay – Indonesian steamed fish dumpling
- Silesian dumplings – Traditional Silesian potato dumplings
- Siopao – Philippine steamed bun
- Soon kueh – Shredded bamboo shoots, turnips and small dried shrimps wrapped in rice-tapioca flour skin
- Strapačky – Dish of dumplings with sauerkraut or cheese
- Suanla chaoshou – Spicy sauce over steamed, meat-filled dumplings
- Szilvásgombóc – Plum-filled potato dumplings
T
- Takoyaki – Japanese appetizer
- Tamale – Traditional Mesoamerican dish
- Tamalito
- Tang bao – Large soup-filled variety of steamed buns
- Tangyuan – Traditional Chinese dessert
- Taquito – Mexican dish
- Taro dumpling
- Tortellini – Pasta stuffed with filling
- Tortelloni – Type of pasta
U
- Uszka – Small dumplings traditional in Poland and Ukraine
V
- Varenyky – Unleavened stuffed pasta of Central and Eastern European origin
W
- Wonton – Type of dumpling commonly found in several Chinese cuisines
X
- Xiaolongbao – Type of Chinese steamed bun
Y
Z
See also
References
- 1 2 Gallani, Barbara (2015). Dumplings : a global history. London, UK. ISBN 978-1-78023-433-5. OCLC 906746909.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ↑ "What's a dumpling? Trying to define a world of dough balls". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 2023-03-02.
- ↑ Claudia Roden, The Book of Jewish Food: An Odyssey from Samarkand and Vilna to the Present Day, Penguin Books, 1999, p. 77-78. ISBN 0140466096
Further reading
- Nguyen, Andrea (2011). Asian Dumplings. Random House LLC. ISBN 1607740923
- Robbins, Maria Polushkin; Polushkin, Maria (1977). The Dumpling Cookbook. Workman Publishing Company. ISBN 0911104852
- Hornsby, Dennis (2020). The Complete Dumpling Recipe Guide. Dinner By Dennis.
External links
- Media related to Dumplings at Wikimedia Commons
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