Corn, maize; millet, grain harvested from millet grass or corn bread or baked food made from corn flour.
A thick soup made with aubergines (US: eggplants), pumpkin, peppers and tomatoes flavoured with garlic, allspice and caraway seeds.
"Drunkards." Cakes or doughnuts, deep-fried choux pastries flavoured with anise and soaked in wine or syrup.
"Drunk." Gurnard. Gurnards are strange-looking, scaly, bottom-feeding fish with spikes which use the three bottom rays of their pectoral fins to "feel" the sea bed. They have firm-textured white meat with not much flavour, and are rich in protein, iodine and phosphorus. They emit a strange grunting noise and some make good eating. The grey gurnard (Eutrigla gurnardus) has a brownish-grey back and silver belly. The red gurnard (Aspitrigla cuculus) is the most attractive member of the family with pinkish-red colour and the finest flavour of the gurnards. The tub gurnard (Trigla lucerna) is a large brownish-orange variety with bright orange pectoral fins and is the one most readily available in the United Kingdom. There is a variety known as flying gurnard as it is a fine swimmer which sometimes leaps out of the water. They are all very bony fish. Small ones are excellent in soup. Red or grey mullet (US: striped mullet) can generally be subsituted for it, and are usually better. Can also refer to the use of alcohol in a dish.