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Caribbean Cooking: Marvelously Eclectic
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16450 |
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Section : |
LIFE
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Date : |
5 / 1989 |
2,436 Words |
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Dunstan A. Harris Dunstan A. Harris, a native Jamaican, is a food and restaurant
consultant and author of Island Cooking: Recipes from the
Caribbean. He now resides in New York City. |
Tantalizing spices transform the mundane into the extravagant, creating a Caribbean gastronomical odyssey.
Through the seafood-rich Bahamas and the islands of the Greater Antilles--Cuba, Hispaniola (Dominican Republic and Haiti) Puerto Rico, and Jamaica southerly to the small pearls of the Leewards and Windwards--among them the French departements of Guadeloupe and Martinique--pause at the Dutch Antilles, meander to the tiny Grenadines and Barbados, touch at Trinidad and Tobago, and finally curl by mainland Guyana to the south. Interspersed in the sparkling, azure Caribbean are dozens of islands, which, along with lands bordering the eastern coastline of Central America, comprise cultures and sovereignties that share gustatory history.
Unlike European, Asian, and African cuisines, which are steeped in undisputed, identifiable culinary traditions, Caribbean cooking is marvelously eclectic. Throughout the various colonizations and the settling of slaves and indentured laborers at the islands' plantations, most dishes bear foreign influence and are confluences of superb ethnic blends.
Cornish pastries and meat and potato-filled pastries are today's delicious Jamaican meat patties--bursting with highly peppered seasonings. And didn't the Spanish bequeath escabeche or escovitch (pickled fish), a perennial favorite? Only now it dares with a kind of calypso/salsa tempo--full of island flavor and incendiary intrigue. Don't forget the French, who dangled haute cuisine, leaving boundins, court-bouillons and flambes drenched in dark, celebrated rums--the island's legitimate potion; and also the Dutch, who left their stuffed Goudas, and the
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