To keep you busy while I’m swamped with work and school and losing my mind in general (my last summer session class/paper is next Thursday, yay!), I’ve put together the first installment of a little series of food and expansion around the world because expansion knows no geographic limits π
I’ve mentioned a few times before that I spent August of 2008 volunteering in a Peruvian orphanage with infants through the program Mosoq Allyu. In fact, I departed JFK for Lima exactly one year ago on this very Friday morning. The three and a half weeks I spent in Peru were some of the best days of my life, and I honestly wish I could have stayed forever!
The trip, however, was not all baby baby baby. I made sure to include my other great love: food.
I stayed with a family in the “city” of Huancayo, and it certainly helped that Aurora, the mom, was an amazing cook and whipped up a completely new traditional Peruvian dish for lunch every single day! Sadly, I did not have the blog yet — or even a digital camera! — but I captured what I could of the food amazingness I saw everywhere.
On my very first day in Huancayo, I actually thought the trip was going to be a food bust. All I had eaten since arriving were approximately seven white rolls with jam (bread and jam, of all things, turned out to be the standard Peruvian breakfast). I stepped outside to go for a little exploratory walk, and this sign greeted me.
Translation: National Congress of the Potato — International Year of the Potato, 2008
Have I mentioned that I hate potatoes?
Apparently, potatoes (along with wheat and quinoa) are one of the few sustainable crops in the super high Huancayan altitude. A later trip to the market brought the point home:
Things started looking up for me quickly after that initial shock wore off.
Exciting new produce:
Displaying my new finds, pepino and granadilla, on the roof of my family’s house:
Did you know that the most delicious bananas in the world are grown in the Peruvian jungle?
Grocery store loot: best sandwich cookies ever, red banana (best banana ever), membrillo (aka quince), baby oranges, candy bar, quinoa (!!), and mate de coca (aka cocaine leaf tea).
I was so excited to get this quinoa in the store. Even though it is one of the few things that could actually grow up in the mountains, quinoa isn’t a staple of the Peruvian diet where I was because of its bitter (though I don’t think so) taste. After white bread, white rice, white pasta, and white potatoes at every meal, I was thrilled to purchase my own personal stash of whole grains to use for my dinners in.
Rice is such a staple of the Peruvian diet, in fact, that there is a children’s song and dance called “Arroz con Leche” which actually refers to a delicious delicious rice pudding-esque dessert.
More Peruvian delicacies …
A meal of tamal de pollo, pastel de carne, and torta de gelatina from nearby Cafe Exquisitez:
Crepes at Casa de Alan with my co-volunteers:
Closer:
Ceviche!
Closer:
I accidentally ate the spicy pepper that came on top of the ceviche that I was not supposed to eat. I thought it was a tomato. As the tears were streaming down my face, the directors of the volunteer program warned me that I would feel the burn twice … and I did …
The crunchy corn that was served at restaurants instead of chips:
Drinking coconut water in the jungle:
Recognize this one of me eating the Peruvian specialty of cuy picante … aka spicy guinea pig?!
Chewing coca leaves while hiking a glacier to minimize altitude sickness:
Jugo de cana (pure sugar cane juice … cures bronchitis, asthma, anemia, arthritis, kidney, prostate):
Pisco sour (pisco brandy, lime juice, sugar, egg whites):
Zoom on the raw egg white deliciousness:
I wish I had pictures of everything I ate because everything really was blog-worthy. Whenever I travel to new places with regional cuisine, I throw caution to the wind nutrition-wise in favor of trying as much authentic food as possible. This plan worked out beautifully in Peru, as I was literally a bottomless pit due to my persistent case of “traveler’s sickness,” as they call it. I always had room for more π
What is your favorite regional cuisine?
LOVE the photos from Peru!!! What an awesome experience that must have been.
I wish I had more photos of the food in India — I didn’t have a digicam then, either. There were plenty of those sandwich cookies!
I agree w/ you: regional cuisine shouldn’t be sampled with the goal of getting a perfectly balanced, nutritious meal!
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This was such a great post to read! My dad is chilean and I’m part Peruvian too ( though I’ve never been to Peru) Whig made this especially interesting to read. I love membrillo, it’s my dad’s favorite and he likes sandwiches of membrillo, ham, and cheese on a roll. We also do pisco sours in chile!
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I love Mexican food and am thinking of going there just so I can eat tons and tons of authentic rice and beans and burritos π
I love this post! I’ll also try anything when traveling!
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Wow, awesome pictures! This was such a fun post to read. Good luck with your class/work/not losing your mind. I understand totally, I’m in the same place right now.
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great post!
I looove Cuban food! I grew up in Miami and miss it so much now the I live in the South! (miami = not the south)
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oh wow I would love to go there some day, so many places too see and so little vacation time!!
hmm my fav cuisine…gosh I dunno I lvoe all food but seriously I could survive on fruit, PB and cereal
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That looks like an amazing trip! I love most types of ethnic food….Indian, Greek, Mexican, Vietnamese…and they are all so different that I don’t think I could pick a fave!
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UM – is that sweater in the first picture from gap? because i totally have it! π
AWESOME TRIP! π I’m totally jealous – as usual π
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The closest thing I have eaten that is even partially “ethnic” would be my grandma’s lasagna! She was Italian and her lasagna tasted like it was straight form Italy. Other than that, the foods I eat are “ethnic” by USA standards, as I haven’t been as lucky as you to travel anywhere else! Your photos are awesome (I hate potatoes too) and the foods that you encountered took marvelous. I see where you got your title picture from! Thanks for sharing your fantastic trip with us!
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Yay, thanks for showing us the Peruvian pics! I agree, when traveling, eat anything new & authentic that you come across!
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I love all the world cuisines I’ve tried, which is pretty extensive. I definitely have a soft spot for Ethiopian and Thai, though.
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ahhh, this post was so fun to read! I love traveling and exploring different cuisines– I really like south american food a lot (fried plantains, yummm), but in recent years I’ve become OBSESSED with indian food.
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