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  2. Peruvian cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peruvian_cuisine

    Street food stand in the center of Lima. Lima butter bean salad is a salad made with Lima butter beans (called pallares in Perú), cooked whole, cooled, and mixed with a mixture of onion, tomato, and green ají, marinated in lime juice, oil, salt, and vinegar. Lima butter beans (pallares) have been part of the Peruvian cuisine for at least ...

  3. Chifa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chifa

    [citation needed] The first Chinese-Peruvian fusion restaurants were opened in Lima in around 1920 in Lima's Chinatown (Barrio Chino). There are thousands of chifa restaurants across all districts of Lima and many more throughout other cities of Peru, with sometimes multiple independent restaurants operating in close proximity on a single city ...

  4. List of Peruvian dishes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Peruvian_dishes

    Ocopa: Boiled potatoes covered with a fresh cheese sauce, lima beans, onions, olives, and rocoto. [56] Olluco con charqui: Olluco stew with jerky or llama meat. Pachamanca: Variety of meats, potatoes, lima beans and humitas cooked in the pre-Hispanic style (on hot stones buried into the ground) and seasoned with aromatic herbs. [57] [58]

  5. Central Restaurante - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Central_Restaurante

    Central is a restaurant located in the Barranco District, Lima, Peru. Central is the flagship restaurant of Peruvian chef, Virgilio Martínez Véliz , and serves as his workshop in the investigation and integration of indigenous Peruvian ingredients into the restaurant's menu.

  6. Causa limeña - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Causa_limeña

    [10] [11] On the other side, it may also be possible that causa limeña was a patriotic dish during the Peruvian-Chilean Pacific war. At the time, women would help the soldiers by offering them this cold dish. [12] While this dish is called causa in Lima, in the northern city of Trujillo the name is used to designate any spicy dish. [7]

  7. Salchipapa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salchipapa

    The salchipapa was invented as a street food in Lima, Peru. [A] Over the years, it expanded to other places in Peru. [2] In Latin America, the dish's popularity has expanded beyond Peruvian cuisine, and is now also typical of Colombian cuisine and Bolivian cuisine. The dish is also sold on Argentinian and Ecuadorian streets and markets. [3] [4]

  8. Anticucho - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anticucho

    In those days, the Spanish dismissed offal as food for slaves; the Spanish generally cooked with the "prime" cuts only. As a result, many traditional recipes use beef heart and other "off" cuts. In Peru, the tradition continues with the traditional name and ingredients; anticuchos are consumed by all social classes of Peru, and are especially ...

  9. Suspiro de limeña - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suspiro_de_limeña

    An even older recipe had it made of chicken breast boiled in milk, almonds and thickened with flour and was meant as a bland food for the sick and weak. The other element of the Suspiro de Limeña is meringue, also brought to Peru by the Spaniards. The dessert is consumed mainly in Lima and in other coastal Peruvian cities.

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