cheese
beef
sausage
chili
always, but it depends what u stuff it with.:)
It is ravioli.
That is the correct spelling of "ravioli" (a stuffed pasta dish).(A single piece would be called a raviolo.)
The first mention of ravioli is in the writings of a merchant in the 14th century called Francesco di Marco. He was from Prato, a city in Tuscany, Italy.
stuffed animal cotton candy
Actually, to my surprise I found that when I was in Italy, veggie stuffed ravioli were most common and the sauce covering them was nothing like American sauces. For one thing, many of the sauces lacked tomato sauce. They were cream or butter sauces.
It was in "The Hill" section of St. Louis, home to many great Italian restaurants, that fried ravioli were invented. And, more than likely, you will find them on the menu at quite a few of therestaurants in St. Louis. It may say "toasted ravioli" on the menu, but the fact is that these delicious dumplings are fried.
chicken can always be boiled. I wouldn't recommend it though.
Cotton candy, a balloon, stuffed animals from a prize booth, a hot dog.
No, not literally, like a stuffed-animal would be. But, you can be stuffed as in, the expression, stuffed meaning you are too full or satisfied. It might be something you'd say at an all-you-can-eat buffet.
During sukkot there are no particular foods that must be eaten, but stuffed foods are extremely common. These may include stuffed peppers, eggplants, or cabbage, stuffed fruits and pastries, knishes, kreplach, main-dish pies, or even ravioli. They also eat some dairy products.
If you are asking about the characters no.