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The vegetables include cassava, taro, plantain, potatoes and the spices used include basil, oregano, peppers, onion, garlic and poultry seasoning. In Panama, the seafood prepared with coconut milk can be served with rice, tostones or "patacones", and salad. In coastal areas of Colombia, "rundown" refers to conch stew. [16]
Locally made ampesie (plantain and garden eggs stew) Ampesie—boiled yam. It may also be made with plantains, cocoyams, potatoes, yams or cassava. This side dish is traditionally eaten with fish stew containing tomatoes, oil, and spices. Yam fufu—fufu made with yam instead of cassava, plantains, or cocoyam—is traditionally eaten with ...
Fish stew with coconut milk, garlic, red onions, tomatoes, fermented black beans, chilis, and sour fruits Maja blanca: Coconut–based blancmange, often with sweet maize kernels. Paelya: Filipino adaptation with glutinous rice of Spanish paella and related dishes. Filipino versions can sometimes use coconut milk, especially in the bringhe variant.
3. Add the serrano, olives and halibut and simmer over moderate heat, stirring occasionally, until the fish is cooked through and the stew is thick, about 5 minutes longer. 4. Meanwhile, in a small bowl, using the back of a spoon, mash the remaining garlic to a paste with a pinch of salt.
This vegetarian stew is every bit as warm, comforting, and filling as a classic beef chili. Three types of beans do the heavy lifting, while warm spices and jalapeño add a little extra heat.
Recipe from the Middle Ages using heated beer and pieces of bread; [13] though other ingredients were also used. [14] Bergen fish soup: Norway: Fish White fish (haddock, halibut, cod) and various vegetables in a heavy cream Bermuda fish chowder: Bermuda: Chowder Fish, tomato, onion, other vegetables, served with black rum and "sherry peppers ...
Divide the plantains among four plates. Place a piece of salmon on top of the plantains and a pad of truffle butter on each piece of fish (the butter should melt right over the salmon). Divide the sauce from the pan among the plates and serve. Recipe courtesy of New Latin Classics by Lorena Garcia and Raquel Pelzel/Ballantine Books, 2011.
The Kriol fish seré is similar to a dish from the Garifuna culture, called hudut. There are two main types of hudut – one made with coconut milk, similar to the seré described above, but made with mashed half-ripe plantain. The other type does not use coconut milk and may best be compared to a spicy fish soup.