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Dipping sauce

Type of sauce From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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 or texture to a food, such as pita bread, dumplings, crackers, chopped raw vegetables, fruits, seafood, cubed pieces of meat and cheese, potato chips, tortilla chips, falafel, and sometimes even whole sandwiches in the case of jus. Unlike other sauces, instead of applying the sauce to the food, the food is typically placed or dipped into the sauce.

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Dips are commonly used for finger foods, appetisers, and other food types. Thick dips based on sour cream, crème fraîche, milk, yogurt, mayonnaise, soft cheese, or beans are a staple of American hors d'oeuvres and are thicker than spreads, which can be thinned to make dips.[1] Celebrity chef Alton Brown suggests that a dip is defined based on its ability to "maintain contact with its transport mechanism over three feet [1 m] of white carpet".[2]

Dips in various forms are eaten all over the world and people have been using sauces for dipping for thousands of years.[3]

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List of dips

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Various chutneys
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A spinach and artichoke dip with tortilla chips
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Tzatziki

A non-exhaustive list of common dips include:

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See also

References

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