sorrentinos
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Etymology tree
Borrowed from Spanish sorrentinos.
Noun
[edit]sorrentinos pl (plural only)
- A Argentinian dish similar to ravioli, but larger, more circular and originally wrapped without fluted edge.
- 2008, Shawn Blore, Alexandra de Vries, Eliot Greenspan, Charlie O'Malley, Jisel Perilla, Neil E. Schlecht, Kristina Schreck}, Frommer's South America, 4th edition, Hoboken, N.J.: Wiley Publishing, Inc., →ISBN, page 162:
- The lamb in soft mint sauce, pizzas, and pumpkin sorrentinos are superb.
- 2010, Danny Aeberhard, Andrew Benson, Rosalba O'Brien, Lucy Phillips, The Rough Guide to Argentina, fourth edition, [London]: Rough Guides, →ISBN, page 291, column 1:
- Food is more conventional, though some dishes have a twist, such as the signature turkey, mozzarella and nut sorrentinos.
- 2019 August 19, Natalie Alcoba, “Food prices soar in Argentina as peso devalues”, in Al Jazeera[1], archived from the original on 2024-04-16:
- Silvia Echeverria gingerly balanced a box containing two sheets of stuffed sorrentinos in the crook of her left arm, holding the pasta like a tray of jewels.
Further reading
[edit]- sorrentinos on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
Spanish
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Possibly named after the creator of the dish, said to be an Italian immigrant to Argentina from Sorrento.
Noun
[edit]sorrentinos pl (singular sorrentino)
Further reading
[edit]- sorrentinos on the Spanish Wikipedia.Wikipedia es