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Along with chicken curry, and cook-up rice, pepperpot is one of Guyana's national dishes. [ 1 ] This dish is usually reserved for special occasions because it needs to cook for several hours, and mostly eaten on Christmas Day or during the Christmas holiday season, and sometimes on Boxing Day.
This is a list of notable stews.A stew is a combination of solid food ingredients that have been cooked in liquid and served in the resultant gravy.Ingredients in a stew can include any combination of vegetables, such as carrots, potatoes, beans, onions, peppers, tomatoes, etc., and frequently with meat, especially tougher meats suitable for moist, slow cooking, such as beef chuck or round.
Cassareep is a thick black liquid made from cassava root, often with additional spices, which is used as a base for many sauces and especially in Guyanese pepperpot. Besides use as a flavoring and browning agent, it is commonly regarded as a food preservative although laboratory testing is inconclusive.
Pan chicken (jerked chicken prepared and sold by street food vendors along with hard dough bread) Peanut (raw, hot or roasted as a street snack) Peg bread; Peppered shrimp, spicy seasoned and cooked (red in colour) Pepper steak; Pineapple chicken; Plantain (green or ripe), may be boiled or fried, and served as a side dish.
Pepper Pot is a thick stew of beef tripe, vegetables, pepper and other seasonings. The soup was first made in West Africa and the Caribbean before being brought to North America through slave trade and made into a distinctively Philadelphian dish by colonial Black women during the nineteenth century.
Callaloo (/ ˌ k æ l ə ˈ l uː / KAL-ə-LOO, [1] Jamaican Patois:; many spelling variants, such as kallaloo, calaloo, calalloo, calaloux, or callalloo) [2] [3] is a plant used in popular dishes in many Caribbean countries, while for other Caribbean countries, a stew made with the plant is called callaloo.
Typical Jamaican meal—fried chicken and oxtail, with a side of rice and (gungo) peas. A pot of Jamaican rice and peas. Rice and peas, a one-pot Creole dish that originated in the Caribbean during the colonial era, includes a mixture of ingredients, cooking techniques and spices influenced by various ethnic groups that exist in the region.
Chicken and rice is a common food combination in several cultures which have both chicken and rice as staple foods. Examples include: Arroz con pollo, a Latin American dish; Chikin raisu (chicken rice, rice pan-fried with ketchup and chicken) , an ingredient in Japanese omurice