Top 10 Peru's Delicious Dishes
A cook prepares ceviche mixto with white corn, a popular Peruvian dish.
Photograph by Abraham Nowitz, National Geographic
By Mark Adams,
author of Turn Right at Machu PicchuIn recent years, Peru’s eclectic cuisine has earned acknowledgement as one of the world’s finest. But while quinoa and pisco sour cocktails have migrated to become favorites around the world, the best Peruvian specialties are still found in their home country. Here are ten to try en route to Machu Picchu.
1. Ceviche
The icy Humboldt Current that flows through the
Pacific Ocean just off Peru’s coast supports one of the world’s most bountiful
sources of seafood. If Peru had an official national dish, it would probably be
this preparation of raw fish marinated in citrus juice. The acid in the fruit
“cooks” the fish, giving it a delicate flavor and slightly chewy consistency.
The dish is usually spiced with red onion and aji pepper, and served (typically
at lunch) with sweet potato or choclo, a white Andean corn with
dime-size kernels. Bold gastronomes can drink the leftover citrus marinade,
which is known as leche de tigre, tiger’s milk.
2. Cuy
There’s no way to sugarcoat it. This staple meat
raised in many households of the Andes goes by a different name in the United
States: guinea pig. (One indication of how important the dish is to the rural
Peruvian diet: In a cathedral in Cusco hangs a replica of Da Vinci’s Last
Supper, in which Christ and the 12 disciples are seated around a platter
of cuy.) The meat, which is quite bony, is usually baked or barbecued on a spit
and served whole—often with the head on. It has a pleasant, gamy taste like
that of rabbit or wild fowl.
3. Causa
A visitor to any market in Peru is certain to
find two things—hundreds of varieties of potatoes, which may have originated
here (Peru’s longtime rival Chile also claims tuber originality), and piles of
avocados large enough to toboggan down. A traditional causa layers
these two ingredients into a sort of casserole, which is sliced and served
cold. Other layers might contain tuna, meat, or hard-boiled egg.
4. Lomo Saltado
A hundred years before anyone had heard of Asian
fusion cuisine, boatloads of Chinese immigrants arrived in Peru looking for
work. The ingredients and techniques they added to Peru’s food vocabulary are
probably best exemplified by this hearty hybrid stir-fry, in which beef,
tomatoes, peppers, and onions are blended in a pan with soy sauce and fried
potatoes. Not a dish for the carb-phobic; it’s usually served over white rice.
5. Aji de Gallina
The yellow aji pepper lends its color—a hue
similar to Tweety Bird’s—as well as its mild kick to several Peruvian dishes.
Among them is this rich, velvety stew made with chicken and condensed milk and
thickened with de-crusted white bread. A vegetarian alternative with a similar
flavor is the ubiquitous papa a la huancaina, boiled potato with
creamy yellow sauce.
6. Anticuchos
These skewers of grilled, marinated meat (much
like shish kebabs) are served everywhere in Peru. High-end restaurants offer
them as entradas, or appetizers. Street-cart vendors sell them
slathered in a garlicky sauce. While almost any meat can be prepared this way,
the most traditional—and best—anticuchos are made with beef heart, a
practice believed to trace back to the days when Peru’s Spanish conquerors
would consume a cow’s choicest cuts and leave the organs for their slaves.
7. Rocoto Relleno
This dish is typically associated with Arequipa,
Peru’s second largest city, but it is served everywhere. What appears to be a
plain-old red bell pepper is actually a fiery Capsicum pubescens (at
least ten times as hot as a jalapeño when raw, but boiled to reduce its
thermonuclear properties), stuffed with spiced, sautéed ground beef and
hard-boiled egg. This is topped with melted white cheese, baked, and served
whole.
8. Alpaca
In the Northern Hemisphere, the name alpaca
refers to expensive wool used to make sweaters and socks. In the Andean
highlands, this camelid (a smaller cousin of the llama) has also been a source
of meat for centuries. The taste is similar to buffalo or other grass-fed
meats: somewhat gamier than beef and very lean. Alpaca’s lack of greasiness makes
for excellent jerky, which coincidentally is another ancient Peruvian culinary
innovation. (The name comes from the Quechua word charqui, meaning “to
burn.”)
9. Lucuma
While Peru’s cuisine is most famous for its spicy
and savory dishes, Peruvians adore sweets, too—as evidenced by the popularity
of Inca Kola, a teeth-melting bubblegum-flavored soda. Lucuma is a tree fruit
that looks like a mango, but it has a custardy taste akin to maple syrup. It’s
usually used as a flavoring in desserts, and is justifiably popular as a
variety of ice cream.
10. Pollo a la Brasa
This Peruvian-style roast chicken is so
delicious—and popular—that it’s now available in cities around the globe. The
secret is marinating the bird in soy sauce flavored with red peppers, garlic,
and cumin, which gives the meat and skin a smoky, salty taste. Outside Peru
it’s typically paired with French fries, but the more traditional accompaniment
is fried yuca, a waxy tuber that has a pleasant chewiness and holds its own
against the spicy dipping sauces with which pollo a la brasa is
typically served. Source Article
Share this article :