This is a list of notable spit-roasted foods, consisting of dishes and foods that are roasted on a rotisserie, or spit. Rotisserie is a style of roasting where meat is skewered on a spit, a long solid rod used to hold food while it is being cooked over a fire in a fireplace or over a campfire, or roasted in an oven. Spit-roasting typically involves the use of indirect heat, which usually cooks foods at a lower temperature compared to other roasting methods that use direct heat. When cooking meats, the nature of the food constantly revolving on a spit also creates a self-basting process. Spit roasting dates back to ancient times, and spit-roasted fowl and game "was common in ancient societies".
Spit-roasted foods
- Al pastor â a dish developed in central Mexico that is based on shawarma spit-grilled meat brought by Lebanese immigrants to Mexico.
- Cabrito al pastor â a northern Mexican dish consisting of a whole goat kid carcass that is opened flat and cooked on a spit
- Caàkebabñ â a horizontally stacked marinated rotating lamb kebab variety, originating in Turkey's Erzurum Province
- Doner kebab â seasoned meat stacked in the shape of an inverted cone is turned slowly on a rotisserie, next to a vertical cooking element. The outer layer is sliced into thin shavings as it cooks.
- Gyros â a Greek dish made from meat cooked on a vertical rotisserie
- Inihaw â a general Filipino term for grilled or spit-roasted meat or seafood
- Lechon â a general Spanish term for whole spit-roasted pig common in Spain, Latin America, and the Philippines
- Lechon manok â a Filipino spit-roasted chicken dish made with chicken marinated in a mixture of garlic, bay leaf, onion, black pepper, soy sauce, and patis (fish sauce).
- Méchoui â a dish in North African cuisine consisting of a whole sheep or a lamb spit-roasted on a barbecue.
- Mutzbraten â an eastern Thuringia and western Saxony dish of meat from the shoulder or pig`s back, seasoned with salt, pepper and marjoram, marinated and cooked in birch wood smoke on so-called Mutzbraten stands.
- Obersteiner SpieÃÂbraten â a culinary specialty of Idar-Oberstein, Germany consisting of a rolled roast using beef or pork neck.
- Paksiw na lechon â a Filipino dish consisting of leftover spit-roasted pork (lechon) meat cooked in lechon sauce or its component ingredients of vinegar, garlic, onions, black pepper and ground liver or liver spread and some water.
- Rotisserie chicken â a chicken dish cooked on a rotisserie, whereby the chicken is placed next to the heat source to cook it
* Pollo a la Brasa â a common dish of Peruvian cuisine and one of the most consumed in Peru, it is a rotisserie chicken dish that is a Peruvian version of pollo al spiedo.
- Shawarma â a Middle Eastern meat preparation based on the doner kebab of Ottoman Turkey
- Siu mei â the generic name in Cantonese cuisine given to meats roasted on spits over an open fire or a huge wood burning rotisserie oven.
- Spettekaka â a local dessert in some southern areas of Sweden, the name means "cake on a spit", which describes its method of preparation.
- Spit cake â a European cake made with layers of dough or batter deposited, one at a time, onto a tapered cylindrical rotating spit
* Baumkuchen â a German variety of spit cake
* KürtÃ
Âskalács â a spit cake specific to Hungarian-speaking regions in Romania, more predominantly the Székely Land, and popular in Hungary and Romania
** Baumstriezel â a similar pastry to KürtÃ
Âskalács originating from the Saxon communities of Transylvania
** TrdelnÃÂk â a spit cake similar to KürtÃ
Âskalács popular in Slovakia and Czechia
* Ã
 akotis â a Polish-Lithuanian traditional spit cake
- Suckling pig â traditionally cooked whole, often roasted, in various cuisines, and sometimes cooked on a rotisserie
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