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Argentine cuisine uses locally-grown cereals, grains, oil seeds, fruits and vegetables, as well as meat. Meat products have been dominant in the country since the 16th century. [ 15 ] The country is regarded as a major beef, pork and poultry producing and consuming country.
In 1931, renown Afro-Argentine chef Antonio Gonzaga published Argentina's first cookbook, El cocinero práctico argentino ("The Practical Argentine Cookbook"), credited as the first cookbook in Argentina. The book detailed traditional Argentine cuisine with painstaking effort, chronicling over 300 recipes.
A common Argentine breakfast dish consisting of fried julienne potatoes, eggs, cheese and vegetables. [5] Sorrentinos: pasta A type of ravioli created by immigrants from Sorrento, Italy Vitel toné: meat dish cold, sliced veal covered with a creamy, mayonnaise-like sauce that has been flavored with tuna. It is considered a traditional Christmas ...
العربية; Azərbaycanca; Беларуская; Беларуская (тарашкевіца) Български; Català; Cebuano; Cymraeg; الدارجة
Name Image Main ingredients Description Alfajor: Biscuits, dulce de leche, chocolate : Its basic form consists of two round, sweet biscuits joined with mousse, dulce de leche or jam, and coated with black or white chocolate (many alfajores are sold in "black" and "white" flavours) or simply covered with powdered sugar.
Another determining factor in Argentine cuisine is that Argentina is one of the world's major food producers. It is a major producer of meat (especially beef), wheat, corn, milk, beans, and since the 1970s, soybeans. Given the country's vast production of beef, red meat is an especially common part of the Argentine diet.
Che Chori's slogan — "Artisan food with an Argentine twist," reads the sign by his popular drive-in at 3124 W. 16th St. — speaks to the restaurant's from-scratch recipes that take days to make ...
The high consumption per capita [7] shows that beef is profoundly integrated into traditional Argentine cuisine. However, as can be seen, beef exports are not an essential part of the Argentine economy. This is in large part because Argentina consumes most of its beef and the industry has been prevented from orienting itself to an export industry.