Showing posts with label Peru. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Peru. Show all posts

Saturday, October 10, 2009

Picarones- Peruvian Donuts


On my ever quest to try every donut in every country, the peruvian version is the Picarones. Marita took me to Panchita (world reknown Peruvian chef Gaston Acurio's Steakhouse) in her home town of Mira Flores, Lima, Peru to get one of these tasty fried pumpkin dough morsels.

Picarones are made from a yeast sweet potato dough flavored with cinnamon and anise, allowed to rise much like the traditional american donut. It is fried and served with a syrup made from chancaca.

We caught the restaurant in between service and were taken to the back kitchen where they demonstrated not only how the dough was made but fried off the crispy on the outside, moist on the inside flavorful rings of dough that I would consume a few minutes later.

Picarones

The flavor in the dough make the Picarones more interesting than the american donut. The only problem is that it doesn't get the same yeasty, fluffy consistency that - ok well no one but Stan's can achieve that but you get my picture.

Still very worth it and a two thumbs up to Picarones from Panchita.

Panchita
Avenue Dos de Mayo 298
Miraflores 242-5957, Lima , Peru
Tel: 40 40 41 37

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Pisco Sour

I quickly learned that the national drink of Peru is the Pisco sour. Quite frankly, I think that this should be more then a national drink- it should be one of their national dishes.
Using egg whites to create frothiness(how did american mixologists only discover this in the last 5 years?), Pisco sours are a great aperitif.. or after aperitif, or through the meal, or after the meal or just about any time of the day drink. The gorgeous concoction in this photo was at La Rosa Nautica. Since people on my dad's tours don't really drink.. I had.. one, two, three, four.. oh wait.. FIVE of these puppies during lunch. Each one, equally as delicious as the one before.
Frozen Pisco sour with Pisco soaked raisins and a shot of frozen Pisco sour at the gorgeous, green, ultra luxury Sumaq Machu Picchu hotel in Machu Picchu- with menu design by world renown Peruvian Chef Rafael Piqueras.


Pisco is an a liquor distilled from grapes and is the national bitter or liquor of Peru. It is said to have originated from the region of Pisqu back in Inca times with the word having Quechuan roots. It is said that Pisco gained popularity when imports of alcohol were banned in Peru and Chile to eliminate competition for locally grown liquors. Pisco, the harder liquor in comparison to wine became the liquor of choice.

There are a few levels of Pisco that should be noted:
Pure: made from one variety of grape.. no blending allowed! usually used are Quebranta Mollar or Common Black varietals.
Aromatic : Muscat or Muscat varietal grapes. Only one varietal again.
Mosto Verde : Made from partially fermented must (the leftover skin bits from the first pressing of wine). Must be distilled before fermentation process turns everything into sugar.
Alcholado : blended grapes
All pisco is to be aged three months. There are differences between Chilean and Peruvian Pisco. Seeing that I've never had Chilean Pisco, Peruvian tastes like heaven to me!

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Real Maize and Cebiche


Corn nowadays has been so genetically altered, it looks nothing like the thumb size, triangular Zea Mays that originated out of South America. Nowadays we are use to seeing perfectly neat pinky size rows of corn. The truth is, Zea Mays was not in perfect rows. In fact, original Zea Mays only had maybe 10 kernels on each stalk. One of the few places to still find beautiful un-adultered Zea Mays is in the Sacred Valley of Peru. A typical train snack, boiled Zea Mays, the size of your thumb can be bought for roughly 30 cents.

The starchy, meaty kernels, plucked off one by one, sweet & delicious make an incredible snack. The kernels, succulent and meaty- yes actually meaty in texture.. incredible!
The national dish of Peru is Cebiche. Cebiche is using the acid from limes to cause a chemical reaction "cooking" the protein. Cebiche can be made with all types of seafood and even some meat proteins. One of the most famous places to eat Cebiche is La Rosa Nautica. An instituion in Lima, La Rosa Nautica has been around since 1983, located on the amazing coastline of Mira Flores, Lima, built on the old pier 4- La Rosa Nautica is the place to be seen - and to watch surfers and enjoy a precisely, peruvian meal made from only the freshest and most local ( in fact La Rosa Nautica has their own farm!) produce coming only from Peru.
I was lucky enough to meet Chef De Cuisine Enrique Blondet who also gave me a kitchen tour- although churning out amazing amounts of covers, by utilizing only the freshest ingredients, produces a meal combined with the setting that anyone visiting Lima for the first time will enjoy. I had two plates of his Cebiche ( I was allergic to the Paella.. sooo Cebiche was my only option) in which he used local Zea Mays to add a different dimension of texture to the spicy, tangy Cebiche.


Espigon 4 Circuito De Playas
Lima 18, Peru
Tel: 511-445-0149