The Only World Recipes Collection You Need (10 Recipes)

by The Gravy Guy | Asian, Dinner, European, Fusion, Latin American, Other Cuisines, Recipe round up

WSenti, this is important. Ten world recipes — a collection spanning Colombia, Japan, Poland, Spain, Italy, Hawaii, Switzerland, and Mexico. These are dishes that have shaped how people eat across their cultures. An arepa is not a tortilla — it’s a specific cornmeal preparation that has been sustaining Colombian and Venezuelan families for centuries. Spanish paella is not rice with chicken — it’s a specific technique built around a specific pan and the socarrat that forms at the bottom. Every dish here has a character that belongs to it.

The approach to every recipe in this collection is the same: learn what the dish actually is in its home tradition before adapting anything. Sushi rice is not just steamed rice — it’s specifically seasoned with a rice vinegar mixture at a specific temperature and handled in a specific way to achieve the texture that sushi requires. Polenta is not cornmeal mush — it’s a specific ratio, a specific simmer time, and a specific finishing technique. Get the essentials right.

If you skip this step, don’t come crying to me. Every recipe here was built with real technique — the steps that produce consistent results — not convenience shortcuts that produce acceptable ones.

Now we’re in business. Use this collection as a reference. Cook through it. The technique stays with you.

Recipes In This Collection

Homemade Arepas

Colombian arepas: masarepa mixed with water and salt, patted flat and cooked on a griddle until a crust forms. Simple, fast, and the base for everything.

🕐 Prep: 15 min
🍳 Cook: 30 min
👥 Serves 4

View Recipe →

Homemade Dumplings (Potstickers)

Layer it in, close the lid, and walk away — the dump format at its best, when the result actually justifies the method.

🕐 Prep: 30 min
🍳 Cook: 25 min
👥 Serves 8

View Recipe →

Perfect Sushi Rice

Perfect Sushi Rice — the version built on proper technique and real ingredients. Calibrated for consistent results every single time.

🕐 Prep: 5 min
🍳 Cook: 20 min
👥 Serves 4

View Recipe →

Homemade Pierogi

Hand-folded dumplings filled with potato and cheese, boiled then pan-fried in butter — the Polish classic that rewards the time it takes.

🕐 Prep: 20 min
🍳 Cook: 45 min
👥 Serves 8

View Recipe →

Quick and Easy Paella

Quick and Easy Paella — the version built on proper technique and real ingredients. Calibrated for consistent results every single time.

🕐 Prep: 5 min
🍳 Cook: 20 min
👥 Serves 4

View Recipe →

Polenta from Scratch

Polenta from Scratch — the version built on proper technique and real ingredients. Calibrated for consistent results every single time.

🕐 Prep: 5 min
🍳 Cook: 20 min
👥 Serves 4

View Recipe →

Spam Musubi

Spam Musubi — the version built on proper technique and real ingredients. Calibrated for consistent results every single time.

🕐 Prep: 5 min
🍳 Cook: 20 min
👥 Serves 4

View Recipe →

Panna Cotta

Panna Cotta — the version built on proper technique and real ingredients. Calibrated for consistent results every single time.

🕐 Prep: 15 min
🍳 Cook: 30 min
👥 Serves 4

View Recipe →

Cheese Fondue

Cheese Fondue — the version built on proper technique and real ingredients. Calibrated for consistent results every single time.

🕐 Prep: 15 min
🍳 Cook: 30 min
👥 Serves 4

View Recipe →

Birria Quesa Tacos

The technique that makes this better than takeout: properly seasoned filling, the right heat, and a tortilla that holds together through the last bite.

🕐 Prep: 15 min
🍳 Cook: 20 min
👥 Serves 4

View Recipe →

Where Most People Blow It

Source the right starch for each dish. Short-grain Japanese rice for sushi. Bombas or Calasparra rice for paella. Masarepa (pre-cooked white cornmeal) for arepas. The starch is not interchangeable — it’s what makes each dish what it is.

Socarrat is the goal in paella. The crispy, caramelized rice crust that forms at the bottom of a properly made paella is not a mistake — it’s the prize. Turn up the heat in the last 2-3 minutes and listen for the crackle. If you hear it, you’re almost there.

Dumpling dough needs rest. Potsticker dough becomes extensible and workable after a 30-minute rest under a damp towel. Fresh-made dough tears. Rested dough stretches into thin wrappers that hold their pleats.

Panna cotta needs exact gelatin measurement. Too much gelatin and panna cotta is rubbery and bouncy. Too little and it doesn’t set. The ratio — typically 1 teaspoon per cup of cream — produces a barely-set, trembling texture that’s correct.

Fondue needs the right cheese blend. Swiss Gruyère and Emmental in the right ratio, with a splash of dry white wine and kirsch as the liquid base. The wine’s acid keeps the cheese sauce stable and prevents separation. Don’t skip the acid.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do these recipes require specialty equipment?

A paella pan helps but isn’t required — a wide, shallow skillet works. A sushi mat helps rolling but hand-rolling works for most preparations. A Dutch oven handles most braises. Most of these recipes adapt to standard kitchen equipment.

Which of these is most approachable for a beginner?

Creamy polenta and panna cotta are the most technique-forgiving — the technique is simple and the room for error is larger. Paella and sushi rice require more attention and benefit from a practice run.

Can I make paella without a paella pan?

Yes, with adjustments. A 12-inch stainless steel or cast-iron skillet works. The key is a wide, shallow vessel that allows even cooking across a large surface. The socarrat forms in any pan that goes from stovetop to high heat.

What is birria and where did it originate?

Birria is a spiced, chili-braised meat dish from Jalisco, Mexico, traditionally made with goat. The quesa-birria taco version — dipped in the braising consommé and griddled — became widely popular recently but the dish itself is centuries old.

Related collections: Pasta Recipes · Chicken Recipes · Beef Recipes · Potato Recipes · Easy Dinner Recipes

The Gravy Guy

The Gravy Guy

The Gravy Guy is a retired sous chef from New Jersey with 30+ years in professional kitchens and three generations of Italian-American cooking in his blood. He writes the way he cooks — opinionated, technique-first, and with zero tolerance for shortcuts. When he’s not slow-simmering Sunday gravy, he’s arguing about the right pasta shape for the sauce.

The Gravy Guy

The Gravy Guy is a retired sous chef from New Jersey with 30+ years in professional kitchens and three generations of Italian-American cooking in his blood. He writes the way he cooks — opinionated, technique-first, and with zero tolerance for shortcuts. When he’s not slow-simmering Sunday gravy, he’s arguing about the right pasta shape for the sauce.

Your Title Goes Here

Your content goes here. Edit or remove this text inline or in the module Content settings. You can also style every aspect of this content in the module Design settings and even apply custom CSS to this text in the module Advanced settings.