Dipping sauce
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Dipping_sauce"
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A dip or dipping sauce is a common condiment for many types of food. Dips are used to add flavor to a food, such as pita bread, dumplings, crackers, cut-up raw vegetables, seafood, cubed pieces of meat and cheese, potato chips, tortilla chips, or falafel. Unlike other sauces, instead of applying the sauce to the food, the food is typically put into, or dipped, into the dipping sauce (hence the name). Dips are commonly used for finger foods and other easily held foods.

A fondue bourguignonne.
A fondue bourguignonne.

Dip is a very widespread food. Forms of dip are eaten all over the world.

Common dips

Some types of dip include:

  • Aioli, the garlic version of mayonnaise.
  • Barbecue sauce, a common sauce often used for grilled meat, and increasingly for non-grilled meat.
  • Blue cheese dressing is usually made from mayonnaise, sour cream, blue cheese, milk, vinegar, onion powder, dry mustard, and garlic powder. It is commonly used as a dip for raw vegetables or buffalo wings.
  • Chili con queso, a dip of melted cheese and chili peppers used in Tex Mex cuisine with tortilla chips.
  • Chili oil is used as a dipping sauce for meat and dim sum.
  • Chocolate, a dip for various fruits, doughnuts, profiteroles and marshmellows.
  • Chutney, any of a wide variety of sauces with origins in the sub-continent of India, from freshly chopped herbs in yoghurt, to bottled, spiced fruit mixtures. Used with snacks like deep fried samosas and pakoras.
  • Clam dip, a kind of condiment for dipping crackers and chips.
  • Fish sauce (Garum), or nam pla, the fermented fish equivalent of soy sauce, used in southeastern Asian cuisines as a dip for snacks and other foods.
  • Fondue, a melted cheese sauce, which rose in popularity in the U.S. and Europe during the 1970s.
  • French onion dip (also called "California dip"), a combination of sour cream, minced onions and onion salt.
  • Fry sauce, a dip made from ketchup and mayonnaise, eaten with french fries and onion rings.
  • Guacamole, another dip associated with Mexico, of mashed avocadoes, onions and chili peppers, used with tortilla chips.
  • Honey, a common dip for french fries and chicken.
  • Hummus, the Middle Eastern dip of ground chick peas and sesame tahini with spices and lemon juice.
  • Ketchup (also called catsup), often used with french fries, onion rings, and a wide variety of other foods.
  • Marinara sauce, a tomato sauce served with breadsticks, pizza, etc.
  • Mayonnaise, the European egg and oil emulsion that is not only the basis for many dips, but is on its own a dip for cold chicken; raw, fried, and grilled vegetables; and seafood.
  • Mustard, ground seeds of the mustard plant; variants are used in Asian cuisine.
  • Olive oil dip, pure or combined with different culinary herbs used for dipping fresh bread, a common dip in Greece.
  • Ranch dressing is a condiment made of buttermilk or sour cream, mayonnaise, minced green onion, garlic powder, and other seasonings mixed into a sauce.
  • Salsa, a fresh or bottled sauce based on tomato, with various chilis, onions, and herbs. Used most often with tortilla chips.
  • Shrimp dip commonly used with vegetables and chips.
  • Sour cream, on its own or combined with mayonnaise and/or other ingredients, a common dip for potato chips.
  • Soy sauce, the fermented bean liquid often served in small saucers for dipping a variety of East Asian foods. Wasabi is often mixed with it.
  • Spinach dip, for tortilla chips and vegetables, popular in the United States and Canada.
  • Sweet and sour sauce, aka plum sauce or duck sauce, a semi-east-Asian chutney, used for dipping fried noodles, dumplings, and other snack foods.
  • Taramasalata, a Middle Eastern dip of carp or codfish roe.
  • Tartar sauce, commonly used with seafood, a mixture of mayonnaise, pickles, and spices.
  • Tentsuyu, a Japanese dipping sauce.

See also

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