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  2. Picarones - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Picarones

    Picarones are also featured in traditional Latin American music and poetry. This dessert is mentioned in the autobiographical memoirs Remembrances of thirty years (1810-1840) (Spanish: Recuerdos de treinta años (1810-1840)) by Chilean José Zapiola, who mentions that picarones were typically eaten in Plaza de Armas de Santiago (Chile) before ...

  3. List of Peruvian dishes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Peruvian_dishes

    Aguadito de pollo: a traditional chicken soup in Peruvian cuisine consisting of chicken, cilantro, vegetables and spices. [12] Arroz con pato a la Limeña: Like Arroz con pato a la Chiclayana but the salad contains mashed avocado, carrot, mayonnaise, and other ingredients.

  4. Peruvian cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peruvian_cuisine

    Traditional food plants, which the indigenous people continued to eat, were regarded as "peasant food" to be avoided. These colonial attitudes took a long time to fade. Since the 1970s, there has been an effort to bring these native food plants out of obscurity.

  5. 80 Easy Date Night Dinners That Beat A Fancy Restaurant - AOL

    www.aol.com/80-easy-date-night-dinners-232700626...

    80 Easy Beginner-Friendly Dinner Recipes For Two PHOTO: JULIA GARTLAND; FOOD STYLING: BROOKE CAISON

  6. King Kong milk candy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/King_Kong_milk_candy

    King Kong is a Peruvian cuisine dessert. It is made of cookies (made from flour, butter, eggs and milk), filled with Peruvian blancmange, some pineapple sweet and in some cases peanuts, with cookies within its layers. [1] It is sold in one-half and one kilogram sizes.

  7. 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.

  8. The best cookbooks of 2024 - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/best-cookbooks-2024-110013838.html

    A Sweet Year: Jewish Celebrations and Festive Recipes for Kids and Their Families by Joan Nathan (Knopf) and My Life in Recipes: Food, Family, and Memories by Joan Nathan (Knopf). After a seven ...

  9. Picantería - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Picantería

    A picantería, is a traditional lunchtime restaurant in Peru, predominantly in and around the cities of Arequipa and Cuzco. [1] Typical offerings of Arequipan cuisine include chicha corn beer made out of a locally grown black corn called Guinapo. Meanwhile in the north of Peru they make chicha de Jora which is germinated corn.