Finnish

[English]

Terms in Finnish 1421-1430 of 2262

piparjuuriliha

/PEE-pah-YOO-ree-LEE-hah/
[Finnish]

Boiled brisket of beef with vegetables served with horseradish sauce.

piparkakku

/PEE-pahr-KAH-koo/
[Finnish]

Ginger biscuit (US: cookie).

piparkakut

/Pee-pahr-KAH-koot/
[Finnish]

Spiced ginger biscuits (US: cookies), traditionally baked at Christmas time.

piparminttu

/PEE-pahr-MEEN-too/
[Finnish]

Peppermint

pippuri

/PEE-poo-ree/
[Finnish] plural pippuria

Pepper. This can refer to black pepper through to red or green peppers.

pippuripaisti

/PEE-poo-ree-PAH-ee-stee/
[Finnish]

Pepper steak. A steak coated with broken peppercorns.

pirtelö

/PEER-tay-leuh/
[Finnish]

Millkshake

pirunpaska

/PEE-roon-PAS-kah/
[Finnish]

A slightly vulgar expression for asafoetida.

pirunpihka

/PEE-roon-PEE-kah/
[Finnish]

Asafoetida

pistaasi(pähkina)

/PEE-stah-see (PÀ-kee-nah(t))/
[Finnish] plural pistaasi(pähkinat)

Pistachio nut. The fruits of a small tree which originated in Central Asia, probably eastern Syria, but which is now widely cultivated. Just before harvest pistachios are enclosed in a green and magenta fleshy cover. These are the very best, if you can get them. However, fresh pistachios are rarely seen, mainly because they have a short shelf-life. They are usually hulled and dried, after which they are either roasted or roasted and salted. For cooking use the ones which are not already salted. They are sold in their creamy beige shells, which split as they ripen. The shells should be removed and the purple papery skins rubbed off revealing the bright green kernels within, the greener the better. They are related to both the cashew and the mango.