Category
page 1Bread dishes
sandwich
A sandwich is a dish typically consisting variously of meat, cheese, sauces, and vegetables used as a filling between slices of bread, or placed atop a slice of bread; or, more generally, any dish in which bread serves as a container or wrapper for another food type. The sandwich began as a portable, convenient food in the Western world, and over time it has become prevalent worldwide.
French toast
bread soaked in beaten eggs and then fried

fondue
Fondue ( , , , ; ) is a Swiss dish of melted cheese and wine served in a communal pot ( or fondue pot) over a portable stove () heated with a candle or spirit lamp, and eaten by dipping bread and sometimes vegetables or other foods into the cheese using long-stemmed forks. It was promoted as a Swiss national dish by the Swiss Cheese Union () in the 1930s.
toast
bread that has been browned to a crisp-like texture
bruschetta
Bruschetta ( , ) is an Italian appetizer (antipasto) consisting of grilled bread topped with garlic, olive oil, and salt. Most commonly it is served with toppings of tomatoes, vegetables, beans, cured meat or cheese. In Italy, bruschetta is often prepared using a grill.

scone
A scone ( or ) is a traditional British and Irish baked good, popular in the United Kingdom, Ireland, Canada, Australia and New Zealand. In the US, scones are a different baked product from the rest of the world, usually sweeter, triangular in shape and served on their own. Scones are usually made of either wheat flour or oatmeal, with baking powder as a leavening agent, and baked on sheet pans, or fried in a frying pan. A scone can be either lightly sweetened or savoury, and can be occasionally glazed with egg wash. The sweetened scone is a basic component of the cream tea, and the afternoon

stuffing
thumb|Stuffing a domesticated turkey|turkey
thumb|Stuffed Turkey as food|turkey
thumb|right|Chilean empanada with ground meat stuffing

crouton
thumb|Croutons atop a salad
garlic bread
bread topped with garlic and olive oil or butter
tarte flambée
' (Alsatian), (Standard German), or ' (French), is a speciality of the region of Alsace, German-speaking Moselle, Baden and the Palatinate. It is composed of bread dough rolled out very thinly in the shape of a rectangle or oval, which is covered with fromage blanc or crème fraîche, thinly sliced onions and lardons.
thumb| – fresh out of the oven
The name of the dish varies in local dialects: it is called Flàmmeküeche, or Flàmmaküacha in Alsatian, or Flammkuche in Lorraine Franconian (compare Standard German ). All these names translate as "(pie) baked in the flames". In Alsace, the French na

canapé
A canapé () is a type of starter, a small, prepared, and often decorative food, consisting of a small piece of bread (sometimes toasted) or cracker, wrapped or topped with some savoury food, held in the fingers and often eaten in one bite.
Gibanica
Gibanica (, ) is a traditional pastry dish popular all over the Balkans. It is usually made with cottage cheese and eggs. Recipes can range from sweet to savoury, and from simple to festive and elaborate multi-layered cakes.

skordalia
Skordalia (alternatively skordhalia or skorthalia) (Greek: , also called , aliada/aliatha) is a thick purée in Greek cuisine, made of garlic in a base of potatoes, walnuts, almonds or liquid-soaked stale bread mixed with olive oil in to make a smooth emulsion, to which some vinegar is added. It is usually made in a mortar and pestle. Skordalia is served as a garnish or side dish. It is mainly served with batter-fried cod, especially during Lent and on the Greek national holiday of March 25th. In the Anglosphere, it is promoted as a dip.
bread pudding
bread-based dessert popular in many countries' cuisines

hagelslag
thumb|Dark chocolate hagelslag sprinkles on buttered white bread
'''' (, ; , from muisjes'') are small, oblong, sweet-tasting chocolate sprinkles or granules, a few millimetres long, which are sprinkled on slices of buttered bread or rusks.
Smörgåstårta
(Swedish for ), or sandwich cake (; ; ), is a savoury main dish, not a dessert, of Swedish origin, popular in Sweden, Finland, Estonia, and Iceland, etc. The name is quite literal, with the dish consisting of a cake-like dish, mainly festive, but composed of layers of bread bound with large amounts of sandwich filling and garnish, structurally similar to a layered cream cake, but culinarily more in line with Toast Skagen. When eaten, it is sliced and served like any other cake.
bunny chow
South African dish consisting of a hollowed-out loaf of white bread filled with curry

frybread
Frybread (also spelled fry bread) is a dish of the Indigenous people of North America that is a flat dough bread, fried or deep-fried in oil, shortening, or lard.

hushpuppy
A hushpuppy is a small, savory, deep-fried round ball made from cornmeal-based batter.
Kubdari
Kubdari or kubed (, Svan: კუბედ) is a Georgian filled bread dish which is particularly a national dish of the Svans. The bread is leavened and allowed to rise. The filling contains chunks of meat, which can be lamb, kid or pork, Georgian spices and onions. Kubdari was inscribed on the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Georgia list in 2015.
Dakos
Dakos or ntakos (), also known as koukouvagia or koukouvayia (κουκουβάγια) or kouloukopsomo, is a Cretan horiatiki consisting of a slice of soaked paximadi that is topped with tomatoes and cheeses such as feta or mizithra. The salad is then flavored with herbs such as dried oregano. Ingredients such as olives, capers, and caper berries are also often added to the dish.

fit-fit
Fit-fit or fir-fir ( fətfət; ፍርፍር fərfər), (Oromo: chechebsaa), is Ethiopian food typically served as breakfast. It is generally made with shredded Ethiopian flat bread (injera or kitcha), spiced clarified butter (niter kibbeh), and a hot spice blend called berbere. Fit-fit is served by preparing a sauce from the butter and spices, and blending it with the shredded flatbread. There are two main varieties of fit-fit depending on the type of flatbread being used: the sourdough injera and the unleavened kitcha.
bread and butter pudding
Traditional sweet British pudding

egg in the basket
egg fried in a hole in a slice of bread

Bread pakora
Indian fried snack

Qurutob
thumb|Qurutob being eaten as part of a meal
Qurutob or kurutob () is a dish of Tajik cuisine. Sometimes described as a "bread salad", it is created using qurut, dried balls of cheese, which are soaked in water; the resulting liquid, salty in flavor, is used as the base of the dish. Strips of fatir, a type of flatbread, are then placed on top. The mixture is served on large plates, and is usually topped with a variety of vegetables, such as onions, cucumbers, tomatoes, or herbs; meat or chili peppers are also sometimes seen as garnishes. Qurutob is a shared dish, meant to be eaten with the hand

fairy bread
Bread topped with nonpareils
biscuits and gravy
breakfast dish in the United States
gyeran-ppang
Gyeran-ppang () is a South Korean street food. It is a fluffy, oblong-shaped piece of bread that is sweet and savory with a whole egg inside the pancake dough.
pigs in a blanket
savory pastry of the United States
strata
family of layered casserole dishes
doubles
sandwich originating from Trinidad and Tobago
Shooter's sandwich
steak sandwich of English origin
panada
Panada or panado is a variety of bread soup found in some Western European and Southern European cuisines and consisting of stale bread boiled to a pulp in water or other liquids.
Aish as-Saraya
Arab dessert
Pizza bagel
bagel with pizza toppings
sausage bread
American food using sausage
biskotso
Biscocho, also spelled biskotso (from ), refers to various types of Filipino twice-baked breads, usually coated with butter and sugar, or garlic in some cases. Biscocho is most strongly associated with the versions from the province of Iloilo, although it actually exists nationwide in various forms. It is also known as biscocho duro, machacao, or matsakaw. It is also historically known as pan de caña (literally "[sugar]cane bread").
Beer from bread
Beer brewed using bread
blöta
thumb|Sop at Christmas, Sweden, 1910
A sop is a piece of bread or toast that is drenched in liquid and then eaten. In medieval cuisine, sops were very common; they were served with broth, soup, or wine and then picked apart into smaller pieces to soak in the liquid. At elaborate feasts, bread was often pre-cut into finger-sized pieces rather than broken off by the diners themselves. The bread or croutons traditionally served with French onion soup, which took its current form in the 18th century, can be considered modern-day sops.
pane frattau
Sardinian dish
sandwich loaf
North American dish of a sandwich made of a horizontally sliced loaf of bread