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Drana Golden Chicken 30 g

Drana Golden Chicken 30 g

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0,50 €
(1,67 €/100 g) 0,45 € excl. VAT
A mild seasoning blend for chicken that adds gentle savoury flavour and a warm golden colour—ideal for roasting, grilling, or quick…

Articles

Rosemary: The Aromatic Herb That Lifts Roasts, Potatoes, and Marinades

Rosemary: The Aromatic Herb That Lifts Roasts, Potatoes, and Marinades

Rosemary is one of those herbs that can make a dish taste “finished” with almost no effort. Used sparingly, its piney, resinous aroma deepens roasted meats, vegetables, and olive-oil based marinades—and it can be surprisingly effective in modern Asian-inspired grilling and umami-rich sauces, too.




Recipe for Aloo Choley

Recipe for Aloo Choley

Let's prepare a recipe for Aloo Choley, a delicious Indian dish made from potatoes and chickpeas, full of spices and flavors that will transport you right to the heart of India!






Turmeric

Turmeric

Discover the power of turmeric! This natural plant is the key to better health – from supporting digestion to protecting against inflammation. Turmeric extract with a high curcumin content is a powerful ally for your well-being and vitality. Be inspired by its natural healing properties and start using turmeric as part of your everyday life.



Recipe for Japanese Curry Kare Raisu

Recipe for Japanese Curry Kare Raisu

Discover the secrets of traditional Japanese curry, Kare Raisu! Learn a simple recipe for a delicious dish that combines exotic flavors with home comfort.



Thai Yellow Curry with Nam Prik Kaeng (Creamy Coconut Chicken Curry)

Thai Yellow Curry with Nam Prik Kaeng (Creamy Coconut Chicken Curry)

This Thai-style yellow curry is comforting, fragrant, and weeknight-friendly: rich coconut milk, tender chicken, and just enough heat from Nam Prik Kaeng curry paste. Serve it soupy over rice or simmer it down into a thicker curry—either way, it’s a bowl of pure warmth.


Provençal seasoning: a blend of herbs that enhances both vegetables and meat

Provençal seasoning: a blend of herbs that enhances both vegetables and meat

Provençal seasoning—often sold as “Herbs de Provence”—is a fragrant mix of dried Mediterranean herbs that can make everyday food taste more rounded and aromatic in seconds. It’s a classic for roasted vegetables and grilled meats, but it also fits surprisingly well into simple Asian-style meals when you want extra aroma without adding complexity.



Parsley Leaf: the quiet herb that lifts soups, fish and marinades

Parsley Leaf: the quiet herb that lifts soups, fish and marinades

Parsley leaf is easy to overlook because it rarely steals the spotlight—but that’s exactly why it’s so useful. A small pinch can brighten a broth, clean up a rich sauce, and add a fresh green finish to fish or grilled meats. Fresh and dried versions behave differently, so knowing when to use which makes everyday cooking noticeably more balanced.




Potato Starch: The Quiet Trick Behind Extra Crispy Coatings and Silky Sauces

Potato Starch: The Quiet Trick Behind Extra Crispy Coatings and Silky Sauces

Potato starch doesn’t look like much, but it can change the texture of your cooking in minutes. Used the right way, it turns pan sauces glossy, helps soups feel rounder without tasting “floury,” and creates a light, shatteringly crisp crust on tofu, chicken, mushrooms, or vegetables—one of the small restaurant-style techniques that shows up again and again in Asian home cooking.



Colombo Curry: The Fragrant Caribbean Spice Blend Cooked Like Curry

Colombo Curry: The Fragrant Caribbean Spice Blend Cooked Like Curry

Colombo curry (often simply “colombo”) is a Caribbean-style spice blend that behaves a lot like curry powder—but with its own identity. Bloom it briefly in oil, simmer it with chicken, fish, or vegetables, and finish the dish with something creamy (often coconut milk) plus a bright squeeze of lime.


Donburi, biryani, and other one-bowl meals: how they work and how to understand them

Donburi, biryani, and other one-bowl meals: how they work and how to understand them

One-bowl meals are not shortcuts or emergency meals in Asia – they are often well-thought-out rice dishes where rice is not a side dish but the center around which flavor, aroma, and texture are arranged. In this guide, we will show you how a bowl like Japanese donburi differs from layered biryani, what rice bowls have in common, and how to choose the right rice and style at home according to what you crave and how much time you have.


Which sauces and noodles to watch out for in gluten-free Asian cooking

Which sauces and noodles to watch out for in gluten-free Asian cooking

Gluten-free Asian cooking often does not depend on whether you buy the "right" vegetables or meat, but on two tricky places: sauces and noodles. The basic ingredients can be naturally gluten-free, but one common soy sauce or wheat noodles can completely compromise the safety of the entire dish. The article provides specific guidance, the main risk situations, and practical procedures on how to handle this at home without unnecessary stress.


Oven-Roasted Pork Neck: Juicy Inside, Crisp Crust, Effortless Method

Oven-Roasted Pork Neck: Juicy Inside, Crisp Crust, Effortless Method

Pork neck (also sold as pork collar) is naturally marbled, which makes it one of the most forgiving cuts for oven roasting. This recipe keeps the prep simple, delivers a juicy sliceable roast, and finishes with a fragrant, lightly crisp crust—plus an optional sweet-salty glaze if you want a subtle Asian-inspired twist.


How to choose the right coating or dough: crispiness, elasticity, and translucency according to the type of flour and starch

How to choose the right coating or dough: crispiness, elasticity, and translucency according to the type of flour and starch

In Asian cuisine, it is often not just the taste that matters, but mainly the texture: should the coating be crispy and light, the dough elastic and pliable, the sauce delicate and shiny, or the dumpling almost translucent after steaming? This is exactly where the choice of flour, starch, and type of coating makes the biggest difference. This guide will help you choose the right “coating or dough” depending on exactly what you want to cook – and avoid typical label mix-ups.




North and South India in the kitchen: how to recognize the difference on the plate and what to cook at home

North and South India in the kitchen: how to recognize the difference on the plate and what to cook at home

"Indian cuisine" is not one taste or one sauce. For a European home cook, however, the division into north and south is one of the most practical reference points: it helps to understand why sometimes bread and a creamier sauce make more sense, other times rice, coconut, and a more pronounced acidity. This article will show the main differences, what both directions have in common, and how to bring them into everyday home cooking without unnecessary shortcuts and mistakes.


Indian curry: basics and main styles (and how not to get lost in them)

Indian curry: basics and main styles (and how not to get lost in them)

"Indian curry" is not one recipe nor one universal sauce. It is a broad family of saucy dishes and techniques that vary from region to region and household to household. In this guide, you'll clarify terms (curry vs. curry powder vs. masala), understand the main Indian directions, and most importantly: you will learn how to practically choose the right base and set your expectations so that the result tastes exactly how you want.


Naturally gluten-free Asian dishes: what is usually a safe base and where the traps lie

Naturally gluten-free Asian dishes: what is usually a safe base and where the traps lie

Asian cuisine can be great for gluten-free eating – it often relies on rice, legumes, vegetables, coconut, and fermented flavors. However, it can also surprise with "hidden" gluten in sauces, wheat noodles, coatings, or cross-contact during preparation. In the article, we clarify which dishes are naturally gluten-free, which are sometimes gluten-free, and how to navigate this at home and when ordering.



Ground Turmeric: How to Use It, What to Pair It With, and How to Get the Best Flavor

Ground Turmeric: How to Use It, What to Pair It With, and How to Get the Best Flavor

Ground turmeric is easy to recognize by its bold golden color—but its real value is the warm, earthy depth it adds to food. Used well, it can bring rice, vegetables, soups, and curries together into a cohesive, aromatic dish. Here’s how to cook with turmeric so it tastes rounded (not bitter), when to add it, and which flavor pairings make it shine.


Madras Curry: a Spicy Indian Classic and Easy Ways to Use It at Home

Madras Curry: a Spicy Indian Classic and Easy Ways to Use It at Home

Madras curry is one of the boldest “curry” styles you’ll find in European shops: warming spices, a lively chilli kick, and an aroma that instantly signals comfort food. Here’s what the label usually means, what flavours to expect, and how to turn Madras curry powder or paste into weeknight meals without overthinking it.


Recipe for Takoyaki Sauce and Food

Recipe for Takoyaki Sauce and Food

This article will guide you through the secret that gives this Japanese dish its unmistakable character. You will discover why the sauce is key to the perfect balance of flavors and how its sweet and salty profile creates the harmony that makes this dish so exceptional. Read on to learn how it enhances the whole experience and why, without it, the dish would lose its power.


Thyme: What It Tastes Like, When to Add It, and What It Pairs With

Thyme: What It Tastes Like, When to Add It, and What It Pairs With

Thyme may look modest, but it brings a deep, savory herbal note that can make simple food taste more “finished”. Learn how thyme behaves in cooking (fresh vs. dried), the best timing for adding it, and pairing ideas—including smart ways to use it alongside umami-rich Asian pantry staples.



Caraway

Caraway

Caraway can be subtle or boldly aromatic depending on when you add it and how much you use. This guide explains what caraway tastes like, how it’s different from cumin (often confused because of similar names), and practical ways to work it into rice, noodles, pickles, and spice blends with an Asian twist.


Marjoram: a gentle herb with big aroma (and how to use it beyond soup)

Marjoram: a gentle herb with big aroma (and how to use it beyond soup)

Marjoram is one of those quiet kitchen herbs that can make a dish feel instantly warmer and more complete. Its flavor is soft, slightly sweet, and deeply herbal—especially when you add it at the right moment. Here’s what marjoram tastes like, how it differs from oregano, what it pairs well with, and practical ways to use it in everyday cooking, including Mediterranean and West Asian–inspired meals.





Sauce for Chicken and Rice: How to Nail an Asian-Style Flavor at Home

Sauce for Chicken and Rice: How to Nail an Asian-Style Flavor at Home

Chicken with rice can be a quick weeknight dinner or true comfort food—the difference is the sauce. Below you’ll find practical “building blocks” for common Asian-inspired sauce styles (bright and tangy, soy-umami, curry, or tomato-spiced), plus easy ways to thicken, balance flavors, and keep chicken juicy.


Devil’s Seasoning: How to Find Your Ideal Heat—and Make It Taste Great

Devil’s Seasoning: How to Find Your Ideal Heat—and Make It Taste Great

“Devil’s seasoning” is a handy nickname for extra-spicy chili blends, pastes, and sauces that can turn plain rice, noodles, or a quick stir-fry into something exciting. The trick is choosing a heat level you’ll enjoy—and building flavor around it so the dish is bold, not just painful. This guide shows how to read spiciness cues, dose it confidently, and balance heat like Asian kitchens do.


Regions of Japanese cuisine: why Hokkaido tastes different from Tokyo and Kyoto

Regions of Japanese cuisine: why Hokkaido tastes different from Tokyo and Kyoto

Japanese cuisine is not uniform in taste. Besides shared principles (respect for ingredients, seasonality, purity of flavors), there are important regional differences based on climate, proximity to the sea and mountains, and historical availability of ingredients. In this guide, you will clarify the main areas and how to recognize them even when cooking at home.


Thai curries and their colors: why it's not just about "different shades" and how to choose the right one

Thai curries and their colors: why it's not just about "different shades" and how to choose the right one

Green, red, yellow, panang, massaman... In Europe, Thai curries are often described mainly by color, as if it were one sauce in several variations. In reality, these are different flavor systems based on different pastes, different aromatics, different "coconutiness" and suitability for both quick cooking and slow simmering. This guide will help you understand the differences and especially choose a curry that makes sense for your dish and taste.


Typical Indian dishes: how to understand dhals, "curry", tandoori and street food

Typical Indian dishes: how to understand dhals, "curry", tandoori and street food

"Typical Indian food" does not have a single form. Indian cuisine is a family of regional styles – from delicate legume dhals through various sauce styles (korma, vindaloo, rogan josh, palak paneer, chole) to tandoori and the essential world of street snacks. In this guide, you will get clarity on the most typical groups of dishes, regional differences, and especially how to practically start with Indian flavors at home.


How to replace meat in Asian dishes: flavor, umami, and texture without compromise

How to replace meat in Asian dishes: flavor, umami, and texture without compromise

Replacing meat in an Asian dish does not mean "finding one substitute." In practice, it is much more important to understand the role meat plays in a specific dish – whether it provides texture, carries the sauce, builds the broth, or creates a "grilled" impression. Once you distinguish this, the plant-based version can be full, umami, and convincingly flavorful.


Curry in Asia: how it differs by country

Curry in Asia: how it differs by country

Curry is not a specific sauce or a single “typical” dish. In different parts of Asia, it means different ingredients, different techniques, and a different final flavor profile – from slowly built South Asian sauces through Thai curries based on pastes to Japanese curry thickened with roux. This guide will help you understand the main differences and choose your curry style based on what you expect from it.


How Trade and Migration Changed Asia's Flavors: Why "Traditional" Often Means "Imported"

How Trade and Migration Changed Asia's Flavors: Why "Traditional" Often Means "Imported"

The flavors of Asian cuisines didn't emerge just "at home" from what grew outside the village. Alongside climate and local ingredients, they were shaped by trade routes and migration: the movement of crops, spices, preservation techniques, but also ideas of what a "properly balanced" meal is. When you understand this, you can more easily choose a style you'll enjoy – and above all, stop expecting there to be a single universal "Asian flavor."


Asian noodle dishes: basic types and how to quickly navigate them

Asian noodle dishes: basic types and how to quickly navigate them

Noodle dishes in Asia are not "one soup" nor "noodles in a pan." They are entire families of dishes where the type of noodles, handling of broth or sauce, cooking method, and whether it is a quick street food, a hearty bowl, or a light cold dish differ. Once you understand a few basic differences, it will be much easier to pick the right noodles and the right preparation style.


Vegan Asian cuisine without loss of flavor: umami, texture, and smart fundamentals

Vegan Asian cuisine without loss of flavor: umami, texture, and smart fundamentals

Vegan food in the Asian style does not have to be a compromise or a “substitute” for regular cuisine. In many parts of Asia, vegetarian and vegan cooking has its own traditions – and above all its own way of building flavor fullness: through umami, fermentation, working with texture, the right fat, acidity, and herbs. This article will show how to practically use these principles at home so that the food remains distinctive even without meat, fish, and dairy products.


Trade influences in Asian cuisine: how ingredients, techniques, and flavors spread along routes

Trade influences in Asian cuisine: how ingredients, techniques, and flavors spread along routes

Asian cuisines were shaped by more than just climate and local agriculture – trade also played a crucial role. Spices, sugar, tea, citrus fruits, as well as techniques for working with grains and fermentation spread both by sea and land. In this article, we will show exactly what "trade influences" mean on the plate and how this perspective can help you better understand the differences between regions and cook smarter at home.


How to choose curry paste according to the dish: from quick coconut curry to slow braising

How to choose curry paste according to the dish: from quick coconut curry to slow braising

"Curry paste" is not one universal ingredient. Different types of bases can be hidden under the same name – from Thai aromatic pastes (which are briefly sautéed in fat) to Indian curry bases or Japanese curry roux. In this guide, you will orient yourself mainly by the type of dish you want to cook and avoid the most common mistakes that lead to bland or "strangely" tasting curry.

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