Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Copacabana is located in the Triangle Building at Pike Place Market.The restaurant serves Bolivian cuisine [6] and has a patio lined with red chairs. [7] The menu has included paella, [8] pescado a la Espanola, aji de cordero (lamb in spicy peanut sauce), shrimp soup and corn pie, [9] empanadas, pisco sours, [10] wine, [11] a Bolivian Andean beer called Paceña, and a guarana berry soda from ...
Bolivian cuisine is the indigenous cuisine of Bolivia from the Aymara and Inca cuisine traditions, among other Andean and Amazonian groups. Later influences stemmed from Spaniards , Germans , Italians , French , and Arabs due to the arrival of conquistadors and immigrants from those countries.
Chairo is a traditional dish of the Aymara people, consumed mainly in Bolivia and other countries in the Andes. [1]It is a soup made of vegetables and beef. [2] It is made of chuño (dehydrated potatoes), onions, carrots, potatoes, white corn, peas, fava beans, a small piece of châlona (dehydrated lamb or llama meat,) beef, and wheat kernels and sometimes a small piece of pork rind that goes ...
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Pages for logged out editors learn more
In 2014, it placed 32 nd on Latin America's 50 Best Restaurants in Restaurant Magazine, [34] [35] and won the S. Pellegrino Best Restaurant award in Bolivia. [35] It again won Best Restaurant in South America from Como Sur – South American Gastronomy, [36] and Kamilla Seidler again won the award for Best Chef in South America. [36] In 2015 ...
Pique macho is a Bolivian dish consisting of beef, red onion, green pepper, tomato, french fries, mustard, mayonnaise, and ketchup. Depending on the region it is cooked, boiled egg may also be included. Smaller portions are simply called pique; pique macho is a huge portion, and traditionally spicy because of the pimenton.
AOL Mail welcomes Verizon customers to our safe and delightful email experience!
The Bolivian anticucho is a dish based on thin beef heart fillets marinated in spices, oil, and vinegar, cooked on skewers and over charcoal, and then served hot, mainly accompanied by roast potatoes and spicy sauce or peanut llajua. The anticucho is widely known as one of the favorite night delicacies dishes in innumerable parts of Bolivia.