Salmoriglio
Sicilian sauce
Halibut topped with salmoriglio sauce | |
Type | Condiment |
---|---|
Region or state | Southern Italy |
Main ingredients | Lemon juice, olive oil, garlic, salt, and herbs |
Salmoriglio is a southern Italian condiment made of lemon juice, olive oil, garlic, salt, and herbs (such as oregano and parsley).[1] It is common in Sicily[2] and Calabria[1][3] as an accompaniment to seafoods or meats,[2] especially swordfish.[3]
Salmoriglio shares the same etymology as Spanish salmorejo (from Latin salimuria meaning "brine"). However, they are two entirely different dishes, salmoriglio being a sauce or condiment based on lemon, herbs and oil, whereas salmorejo is a Spanish soup consisting of tomatoes and bread.
See also
- Mojo
- Chimichurri
References
- ^ a b Rosetta Costantino with Janet Fletcher, My Calabria: Rustic Family Cooking from Italy's Undiscovered South (W.W. Norton, 2010), p. 172.
- ^ a b Anna Muffoletto, The Art of Sicilian Cooking (Doubleday, 1971), p. 161.
- ^ a b Gillian Riley, "Calabria" in The Oxford Companion to Italian Food (Oxford University Press, 2007), pp. 86-89.
- v
- t
- e
Condiments
- List of condiments
- List of common dips
- List of syrups
- Agre dulce
- Agrodolce
- Aioli
- Barbecue sauce
- Bigarade sauce
- Brown sauce
- Buffalo sauce
- Cheese sauce
- Chili sauce
- Chimichurri
- Cocktail sauce
- Colo-colo
- Crema
- Caruru
- Dabu-dabu
- Fish sauce
- Fritessaus
- Fry sauce
- Garum
- Gastrique
- Gravy
- Hot sauce
- Latik
- Kaymak
- Khrenovina
- Lechon sauce
- Marie Rose sauce
- Mayonnaise
- Kewpie
- Kielecki
- Miracle Whip
- Mignonette sauce
- Mild sauce
- Monkey gland sauce
- Mumbo sauce
- Oyster sauce
- Peanut sauce
- Pearà
- Pesto
- Pistou
- Remoulade
- Salsa golf
- Salsa verde
- Satsivi
- Steak sauce
- Tartar sauce
- Tatbila
- Teriyaki sauce
- Tiparos
- Tkemali
- Tomato sauce
- Vincotto
- XO sauce
- Zingara sauce
preserves
- Dijon mustard
- Honey mustard
- Karashi
- Kasundi
- Mostarda
- Spicy brown mustard
- Sweet mustard
- Tecuci mustard
- Tewkesbury mustard
- Turun sinappi
- Yellow mustard
This condiment-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e