Thursday, November 21, 2013

Yummy Salvadoran food

For the most part, I love the food of El Salvador. It is wonderful and delicious. I think I could eat beans and tortillas every day for the rest of my life. In 2011, I did eat beans and tortillas on a daily basis and I missed them when I returned to the US. Since I’m going back to the US shortly, I decided now would be a great time to write a food blog and remember fondly all the delicious meals I had here. I’ve included lots of pictures because I love taking pictures of my food. I’ve also included some general descriptions of the more common food here.
Buen provecho! Bon appétit! Happy eating!
Pupusas: These are corn tortillas stuffed with one or more of the following: refried beans, cheese (a soft Salvadoran cheese), chicharrón (cooked pork meat), squash (usually guisquil/ayote), or loroco (edible flowers). Pupusas can be bought nearly everywhere in El Salvador. There are even restaurants dedicated to this hearty treat, aptly named pupuserías. Pupusas are served with a pickled cabbage salad (curtido) and fresh tomato sauce.
Tortillas: These are like circular flatbreads made from corn or wheat originally made by Mesoamerican peoples. The tortillas in El Salvador are thick and made from corn. Tortillas are usually consumed during lunch and dinner.
Beans (frijoles): Beans (usually red beans) are cooked in many different ways. They may be whole, mashed, or pureed and served hot or cold. They are often eaten for breakfast, lunch, and dinner. 
Rice (arroz): A popular grain known all around the world, rice is also common in El Salvador. This grain is second only to maize (corn) in worldwide production.
Casamiento: In Spanish “casamiento” means marriage. In El Salvador, casamiento is a mixture of rice and beans and it is delicious!
Tamales: Pockets of corn dough (like a corn dumpling) stuffed with meat, veggies, or sweet corn and cooked in banana leaves or corn husks. They can be served hot or cold.
Plantains (plátanos): Though similar to bananas, plantains are usually fried or boiled. They are often served with a variety of accompaniments such as beans, sour cream, cheese, and eggs.
Chicken (pollo): Farm fresh chicken served fried, grilled, and in soup.
Seafood (mariscos): Fish, shrimp, oysters, lobster, and calamari can all be found in El Salvador. White fish and shrimp are the more common types of seafood served at the Pastoral House.
Ceviche: Raw fish cured in lime juice often mixed with cilantro, green peppers, salt, and onions. I have never had this at the Pastoral House but you can get it at the beach.
Riguas: These are made from elote (sweet corn). After the sweet corn has been removed from the cob it needs to be put through a grinder or into a blender. From there it’s fried up on a griddle or something in the like. They’re basically small, sweet corn fried pancakes. Kind of like potato pancakes.
Panes rellenos: Big stuffed sandwiches filled with roasted chicken or turkey and vegetables.
Cheese (queso): There are several types of cheese found in El Salvador. The most common type of cheese is hard, crumbly, white, and salty. It’s eaten with beans, tortillas, bread, and by itself.
Eggs (huevos): Farm fresh eggs served fried, scrambled, hard-boiled, and more. They are delicious fried inside of a tortilla.
Guisquil/Chayote: This vegetable is a member of the gourd family and can be eaten in many forms- boiled, mashed, fried, baked, or raw.
Yucca: A white, starchy vegetable (root) originally from South America. Yucca can be served boiled, fried, and are sometimes fried up like potato chips. 
Fruit (fruta): Pineapples, mangos, guava, coconuts, watermelons, cantaloupes, bananas, limes, oranges, passion fruit, and other exotic fruits are common in El Salvador.
Vegetables (verduras): Avocados, lettuce, carrots, potatoes, tomatoes, broccoli, green beans, onions, and squash can be found in El Salvador.
Pan dulce: Spanish for sweet bread, these bread and sometimes pastry-like treats come in a variety of shapes, sizes, and flavors.
 

Drinks
Horchata: A drink made from a mix of spices, rice, and morro seeds.
Ensalada: A thick drinkable blend of finely chopped tropical fruits and juices such as pineapple apples, marañon, and watermelon. 
Atol: Atol is a thick, masa based drink. It’s made of corn flour, water, and unrefined sugar. A Salvadoran variety of atol is called atol chuco, which means “dirty” atol because of its darker color.
Tamarind: A unique drink with a tangy, earthy flavor made from tamarind fruit and pulp found inside the pods.
Jamaica: Basically a cold drink made from hibiscus flowers with a little sugar added.
 
Atol chucho
 

Tortillas
 

Corn


Freshly picked beans
 
 
Dried beans
 

Spices


Corn cooking
 

Making pupusas
 

Making riguas
 

The market
 
 
Fresh fruit
 

Assortment of fruit
Guava, passionfruit- 2, zapote, starfruit, rambutan
 

Assortment of fruit #2
Rambutan, passion fruit- 2, Nance, Marañon
 

Mamon
 

Nances
 

Mamey
 

Passion fruit

Coconuts
 

More fruit
 
 
Pineapples and bananas
 

Limes
 

Woman with jocotes
 

Anona
 

Papaya
 

Marañones
 

Green mangos
 

Giant mangos
 

Yummy mangos
 

Mmmmm mangos
 

Ensalada fruit drink
 

Salvadoran hamburger
 

Bananas
 

Add some panela (like brown sugar)
= Deliciousness
 

Panela
 

Ayote squash
 

Cooked with panela
 

...equals deliciousness!
 
 
Casamiento, tortillas with cheese,
empanadas (smashed and fried plantains filled with cream)
 

Breakfast: plantains, beans, egg
 

Same breakfast, cooked differently
 

Paella, hamburger, tortilla
 

Tamale, casamiento, French fries, tortillas with cheese
 

PUPUSAS!!!
 

Tacos
 

Tortilla with an egg
(One of my favorites!)
 

Chicken, veggies, rice, tortillas
Standard lunch for me
 
 
Same thing, only with veggies in a soup
 

Same thing, with everything in the soup
 

Salvadoran enchiladas with French fries
Another favorite
 

Chicken, rice, and veggies
 

Iguana (I tried it once)
 

Riguas
 

Dried and fried fish
(Did not like this)
 

Fish from the market
 

Crabs
 
 
Cooked fish
 

A near-the-beach specialty: calamari
 

Another near the beach and nice restaurant specialty:
Stuffed lobster
 

Shrimp!
 

Nuegados (fried yucca with syrup)
 

Homemade ice cream
 

Fresh honey
 

Pan dulce
 

Candy!!
 
 
Chocolate covered bananas
 

Cocoa beans
 

Tamales
 

A different kind of tamale
 

Loroco flower (used in pupusas)
 

Guisquil (a veggie)
 

Avocados!!
I could eat these daily
 

Iceberg lettuce salad
Not one of my favorites
 
 

1 comment:

Matt said...

Wow great photos, especially liked all the different fruits. I loved the fried plantains, I think I could eat those every day.