List of porridges


Porridge is a dish made by boiling ground, crushed, or chopped starchy plants in water, milk, or both, with optional flavorings, and is usually served hot in a bowl or dish. It may be served as a sweet or savory dish, depending on the flavourings.

Porridges

A

B

C

D

  • Dakjuk type of juk made with chicken.
  • Dalia type of Indian porridge made with Indian grains such as wheat or barley, and served with nuts and dried fruit.

E

  • Eghajira a sweet, thick drink, normally drunk by the Tuaregs on special occasions.

F

  • Farex brand name instant baby cereal food served warm or cold as a first food for infants. Produced by the Glaxo company in Australia and New Zealand since the 1930s.
  • Farina cereal food, frequently described as mild-tasting, usually served warm, made from cereal grains.
  • Frumenty was a popular dish in Western European medieval cuisine. It was made primarily from boiled, cracked wheat hence its name, which derives from the Latin word frumentum, "grain".
  • Fondé a boiled porridge made with rolled millet flour pellets served stirred with condensed milk, sugar, a little butter if available. For older children and adults. Senegal.
  • Fungi a boiled porridge made from cornmeal, served sweet or savory. A standard component of the native 'Fish and Fungi' dish native to the U.S. and British Virgin Islands.

G

H

J

K

L

M

  • Malt-O-Meal a North American brand of wheat porridge that includes malted barley in addition to semolina. It is served hot and comes in chocolate and maple flavors as well as original.
  • Mămăligă made out of yellow maize flour, traditional in Romania and Moldova. It is similar to the Italian polenta.
  • Maypo a brand of maple-flavored oatmeal. It was developed by the Maltex Corporation in Burlington, Vermont, in 1953.
  • Mazamorra a traditional maize-based Latin American food. Several variations by country exist.
  • Meghli a Levantine nutrient-rich porridge created from sugar, ground rice, and caraway, anise and cinnamon ground spices, slow-cooked to form a thick milk-free porridge that is milk-free. It is served cool and topped with raw soaked and peeled kernels native to the Levantine like pine nuts, walnuts, almonds and pistachios, often with coconut shavings.
  • Mieum a Korean gruel created by grinding rice or millet to an almost-powder state and boiling with water.
  • Mingau A Brazilian meal made most commonly with cornstarch, sugar and milk. Also often topped with cinnamon.
  • Močnik a traditional Slovenian porridge
  • Manoomin porridge – a wild rice breakfast porridge from Minnesota
  • Mush – a thick cornmeal pudding or porridge usually boiled in water or milk. It is often allowed to set, or gel into a semi-solid, then cut into flat squares or rectangles, and pan-fried.

O

  • Oatmeal also known as white oats, is ground oat groats, or a porridge made from oats. Oatmeal can also be ground oats, steel-cut oats, crushed oats, or rolled oats.
  • Okayu the name for the type of congee eaten in Japan, which is less broken down than congee produced in other cultures. The water ratio is typically lower and the cooking time is longer. It is commonly seasoned with salt, egg, negi, salmon, ikura, ginger, and umeboshi. Miso or chicken stock may be used to flavor the broth. It is commonly served to infants, the elderly, and the ill.
  • Øllebrød a traditional Danish dish a type of porridge made of rugbrød scraps and beer, typically hvidtøl. A thrifty dish, it makes it possible to use the rest of the bread scraps so that nothing is wasted.

P

  • Papeda or bubur sagu, is a sago flour congee, the staple food of native people in Maluku and Papua. It is commonly found in eastern Indonesia, as the counterpart of central and western Indonesian cuisines that favor rice as their staple food.
  • Pastel de choclo a dish based on sweetcorn or choclo, the quechua word for “tender corn”, or the new corn of the season. It is a typical dish in Chile, but is also eaten in Argentina, Bolivia and Peru with some variations in the recipe, sometimes using corn meal
  • Pease pudding a term of British origin regarding a savory pudding dish made of boiled legumes, which mainly consists of split yellow or Carlin peas, water, salt, and spices. It is often cooked with bacon.
  • Pinole a Spanish translation of an Aztec word for a coarse flour made from ground toasted maize kernels, often in a mixture with a variety of herbs and ground seeds, which can be eaten by itself or be used as the base for a beverage.
  • Pirón or Pirão gummy porridge made of farinha and broth consumed in Argentina, Uruguay and Brazil.
  • Poleá sweet Andalusian porridge made with flour, milk, and sugar and flavored with anise. Sometimes fruit, honey, cinnamon, or other ingredients are added, and it is often served cold and with croutons of fried bread.
  • Polenta cornmeal boiled into a porridge, and eaten directly or baked, fried or grilled. The term is of Italian origin, derived from the Latin for hulled and crushed grain.
  • Puliszka is a coarse cornmeal porridge in Hungary, mostly in Transylvania. Traditionally, it is prepared with either sweetened milk or goat's milk cottage cheese, bacon or mushrooms.

R

S

  • Semolina pudding made from semolina, which is cooked with milk, or a mixture of milk and water. It is often served with sugar, cocoa powder, cinnamon, raisins, fruit, or syrup.
  • Sofkey a traditional southeastern Native American porridge made from corn, pounded, culled and sifted, boiled in water with lye. Served hot or cold traditionally without seasoning. It can be drunk or eaten with a spoon depending on the consistency, which can vary from a thin gruel to a watery porridge.
  • Sowans a Scottish dish made using the starch remaining on the inner husks of oats after milling. The husks are allowed to soak in water and ferment for a few days. The liquor is strained off and allowed to stand for a day to allow the starchy matter therein to settle. The liquid part, or swats is poured off and can be drunk. The remaining sowans are boiled with water and salt until thickened, then served with butter or dipped into milk.
  • Stip (dish) a regional dish in the Dutch provinces of Groningen, Drenthe and Overijssel. It is served as buckwheat porridge with a hole containing fried bacon and a big spoonful of syrup.

T

U

V

W