hidden pixel

Colombian Cuisine Information

Colombian cuisine refers to the cooking traditions and practices of Colombia. Along with other cultural expressions of national identity, Colombian cuisine varies among its many distinct regions.[1][2] Colombian coffee is well known for its high standards in taste compared to others.

Contents

Regional cuisine

Fried Red Snapper, fried plantain, rice and salad.
Culture of Colombia

Art Cinema Cuisine Dance Folklore Literature Music Radio & Television Sports Theater

In Bogotá and the Andean region, ajiaco is a traditional dish. It is a soup made of chicken, corn, many different types of potatoes, avocado, and guascas, a local herb. Traditionally, cream and capers are added at the table before eating. Ajiaco is served with white rice, salad with a hint of lemon, avocado, or sweet or salty tostadas. For breakfast, people in Bogotá often eat changua, a milk, scallion and egg soup.

Along the Caribbean coast, fish and plantains are very popular as is Ceviche. Coconut rice is a common side dish along the coastal cities. Suero, which is a cross between yogurt and sour cream, is widely consumed, and was introduced by Arab immigrants in Barranquilla and other coastal cities. The arepa has many forms in the Caribbean region, which include arepa limpia, arepa de huevo (arepa with egg), and arepa de queso (arepa with cheese).

In the Llanos of the east, barbecued meat is common, due to the cowboy-like culture. Dishes such as the ternera llanera are cooked on a vertical spit over an open fire. Freshwater fish such as the amarillo are also eaten. In the Amazon, Brazilian and Peruvian influences can be seen in the local food. Local resources such as beef and other livestock, as well as freshwater fish, are typical ingredients in Amazonian cuisine.

The tamales Tolimenses are considered a delicacy in the Tolima region. These tamales are made of corn dough, and are filled with a mixture of peas, carrots, potatoes, rice, chicken, pork, and various spices. They are wrapped in plantain leaves and boiled for three to four hours. Lechona is a whole roast pig stuffed with rice, vegetables, and pork, and is typically eaten on Sundays. This dish is now enjoyed throughout the country.

Dishes and foods

Roasted Ants Guinea Pig Dish called "Cuy" A caldo de costilla served hot and with cilantro leaves Patacones are twice-fried plantain patties, often served as a side, appetizer, or snack. Here they are being fried for the second time.

Fruit

Fruit and juice stands are found all over the place, particularly on the Caribbean coast.

Native fruit

Colombia is home to numerous tropical fruits and rarely found elsewhere. There are several varieties of bananas including a very small, sweet version. Others include zapote (Quararibea cordata), nispero (Manilkara achras) lulo (Solanum quitoense), uchuva (Physalis peruviana), passion fruit, borojó (Borojoa patinoi), curuba (Passiflora tarminiana), mamoncillo (Melicoccus bijugatus), guanábana (Annona muricata), guava, mango, apple, pear, blackberry, strawberry and many others.

Meat dishes

Ajiaco is a traditional Andean dish that originated from Bogotá. Basically it’s a chicken, corn, and potato stew with a hint of guasca (Gallant Soldiers), a local herb. Sancocho is a traditional dish that originated in the north coast. It is made basically with any kind of meat along with corn, potato, yuca, plantain and local spices that are cooked together to form a soup. Bandeja Paisa originates from Antioquia and is made with several ingredients making necessary to use a platter (Bandeja in Spanish, hence the name). It is made of beans, rice, fried eggs, chorizo, pork rind and other ingredients depending on the location. Tamales are corn “cakes” wrapped in a banana leaf and steamed. They can be filled with everything from chicken, potatoes, peas, carrots, to rice. The tamales vary in shape and fillings in each region, and almost every region has its own variation. Some well known variations are from Tolima, Santander, Cúcuta, Bogotá and Valle del Cauca; just to name a few. Fritanga is another popular Colombian dish made of meats, fried plantains, chicharrones, and yellow potatoes with aji sauce eaten all over Colombia. It is often used for sharing with friends and family.

Soups

Changua (milk soup with eggs) is a typical breakfast soup of the central Andes region of Colombia, in particular in the Boyacá and Cundinamarca area, including the capital, Bogotá. The dish has Chibcha origins. Caldo de costilla (Spanish for rib broth) is a dish typical of Colombian cuisine, from the Andean region. It is made mainly from beef ribs boiled in water with slices of potato, some garlic, onion and cilantro leaves.

Common Dishes Found on a National Level

A barbecue at a street fair in New York City's East Village known as "Ternera a la Llanera" from the Colombian marshlands

See also

Food portal

References

  1. ^ "Colombian culture and contributions to culture". Mundolatino.com. http://www.mundoandino.com/colombia/culture. Retrieved 2011-02-17.
  2. ^ "Culture of Colombia". Advameg, inc.. http://www.everyculture.com/Bo-Co/Colombia.html. Retrieved 2011-02-17.

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Category:Cuisine of Colombia
Colombia topics
History
Timeline Indigenous peoples · Spanish conquest · New Kingdom of Granada · Viceroyalty of New Granada · Foolish Fatherland · United Provinces of New Granada · Military career of Simón Bolívar (Independence) · Gran Colombia · Republic of New Granada · Granadine Confederation · United States of Colombia · Republic of Colombia · Thousand Days' War · Separation of Panama · Colombia–Peru War · La Violencia · National Front · Current internal armed conflict
By topic Coat of arms · Flag · Demographic · Economic · Military · Natural
Geography
General Geology · Natural Regions (Caribbean · Pacific · Andean · Amazon · Orinoquía · Insular)
By topic Cities · Climate · Mountains · Islands · Rivers · Fauna · Flora · Protected Areas · Environmental issues · Natural hazards
Government
Constitution Law · Bill of Rights · Separation of Powers
Executive President · Vice President · Council of Ministers · Government agencies
Legislative Congress (Senate · Representatives)
Judicial Superior Council · Attorney General · Supreme Court · Constitutional Court
Control Comptroller General · Auditor General · Inspector General · Ombudsman
Security Air Force · Army · Navy · Police
Politics Political parties · Elections · Political ideologies (Liberalism · Conservatism · Uribism · Guerrilla movements · Paramilitarism) · Political scandals
Foreign affairs Andean Community of Nations · Plan Colombia · Union of South American Nations
Economy Agriculture · Banking · Central Bank · Coffee · Communications · Industry · Companies · Currency · Mineral industry · Poverty · Stock Exchange · Taxation · Trade unions · Transportation
Society Demographics · Colombian people · Crime · Immigration · Emigration · Colombian nationality · Languages (Colombian Spanish) · Health care · Education (Universities) · Religion · Metropolitan Areas · People · Human rights (LGBT rights) · Drug trafficking · Water supply and sanitation · International rankings
Culture Architecture · Art · Handicrafts · Carnivals · Cinema · Cuisine · Festivals · Folklore · Juan Valdez · Languages · LGBT · Literature · Media · Medicine · Music · Mythology · National symbols · Public holidays · Religion · Science and technology · Sport · Smoking · Tourism · Colombia in popular culture · Archaeological sites
Portal
South American cuisine
Sovereign states
Dependencies and other territories
  • Aruba
  • Bonaire
  • Curaçao
  • Falkland Islands
  • French Guiana
  • South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands

Categories:

 

The above information uses material from Wikipedia and is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
Some facts may not have been fully verified for accuracy. [Disclaimers]
This page was last archived by our server on Sun May 27 20:40:05 2012.
Displaying this page or its contents does not use any Wikimedia Foundation's resources.
The owners of this site proudly support the Wikimedia Foundation.