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Cajeta de piña y plátano or Pineapple and banana dessert is a sweet fruit paste found in Mexican cuisine. There is a recipe for it published in a 19th-century cookbook from Guadalajara . It is made with crushed pineapple and mashed bananas blended with sugar syrup and baked until a thick, dark brown paste is obtained.
Chicha de piña is a Latin American spicy chicha made from pineapple crusts and cores, panela [1] or brown sugar, and spices such as cinnamon, clove, anise, and nutmeg. It is prepared simply by putting all the ingredients in a pot of water, boiling it, and then simmering it for an hour, before either chilling it to let the flavors further ...
Arroz con camarones y coco – rice with shrimp and coconut milk. Arroz con chorizo y ajíes dulces [citation needed] Arroz con pollo [4] Arroz con puerco y vegetales [5] Arroz verde [6] Bistec de higado – liver steak; Bistec picado – chopped beefsteak. Bollos – corn dough wrapped in nahuala palm leaves, [7] corn husk or plantain leaves ...
Camaron rebosado is prepared by removing the heads, and sometimes the tails as well, of the shrimp. [5] It is then sliced lengthwise along the back and butterflied, with the vein removed. [ 6 ] [ 7 ] The shrimp is then marinated for a few minutes in a mixture of calamansi juice, salt, black pepper , garlic, and other spices to taste.
Tortillitas de camarones are shrimp fritters from the province of Cádiz in Andalusia, Spain. They are made with a batter of wheat flour, chickpea flour, water, onion (alternatively shallot or scallion), parsley, shrimp, salt and pepper. The batter is then fried on both sides in a pan with plenty of olive oil. Usually it is served with small ...
Arroz con gandules, widely regarded as "Puerto Rico's national dish" [1] [2] [3] Puerto Rican cuisine consists of the cooking style and traditional dishes original to Puerto Rico. It has been primarily a fusion influenced by the ancestors of the Puerto Rican people: the indigenous Taínos, Spanish Criollos and sub-Saharan African slaves.
[1] [2] The oval platter represents the Huasteca; the strip of roasted meat, the Rio Panuco; the green enchiladas, the huasteco field; the white cheese, the purity of the people living in the Huasteca; the guacamole, the fruits of the region; the black beans, both the fertility of the land and the oil boom in the area.
Playa Camarones (English: "Shrimp Beach") is a beach along Puerto Vallarta's 5 de Diciembre neighborhood, in the Mexican state of Jalisco. [ 1 ] The beach is about "90 feet wide and stretches for 2100 feet from the breakwater in front of Villa Premiere Hotel to the north."