Become a sous chef in the Cooking Diva’s Experimental Kitchen! Learn more...
  • Return Home
  • Become a Member of Cooking Diva.net!
  • Log-in to CookingDiva.net
  • Cooking Diva is Gravatar Enabled - Globally Recognized Avatar
You are viewing blog entries filed under RECIPES: vegetarian.

Global Voices & WHB #16: Cooking with Culantro edit

My latest article has been published at Global Voices: "Global Fusion: Creating Delicious Food one Meal at a Time."

This week's topics cover: the "Madrid Fusion" event, Pork Education, A Consumer Report from Bermuda, Homemade Cheese Making, Brazilian Mango Fever, From Venezuela with Love, Roots to be Cooked, The Year of the Pom, Going South, and Queen lemon Beauty.

We would love to hear your comments!

2_8 Now, my contribution to Kalyn's Weekend Herb Blogging #16: "Cooking with Culantro"

About this plant: "Culantro" (Eryngium foetidum) is a strong flavored, aromatic herb native from Mexico and Central, and South America. It is cultivated widely all over the world, and it is used extensively in Latin American and Asian cooking. In Panama we use culantro to prepare "Sancocho de Gallina" (Panamanian chicken soup),  different types of rice, tamales, marinades, sauces, etc. In Puerto Rico it is used to prepare beans, asopao, soups, stews, etc.

The "culantro" is also known as: "recao", "long coriander", "ngo-gai", "spiritweed", "black benny", "recao de monte", "false coriander", "Mexican coriander", among many others.

1_10 Medicinally, the leaves and roots are used in tea to stimulate appetite, soothe stomach pains, eliminate gases, improve digestion, and as an aphrodisiac!

Today we are sharing a recipe to prepare a delicious "Arroz con Frijoles Negros y Chimichurri de Culantro" (Black Beans and Rice with Culantro Chimichurri). If you can not find culantro in your area, you can substitute "cilantro".

arroz rice culantro cilantro recipe recipes receta recetas chef melissa panama panamanian gourmet panamagourmet diva cookingdiva glogal voices
  • by Chef Melissa
  • January 22, 2006
  • 12:50 pm

Happy Holidays with plenty love, the LATINO way! edit

Cr_2 There is something about having "Latino blood" in our veins. There is something very special about being born in a Latin American country. My heart has deep roots of love and tears that travel deep,...to the center of our planet Earth. There is a cry of the long gone times that took away many of our traditions and childhood friends. There is a song with perfume of roses, and a thousand butterflies that travel along with the wind in this precious land.

When I was growing up, I used to ask my mom WHY I had freckles in my face. With a smile, every time she said..."you got them from me, and you can not change that.... In the family we all have freckles: we got them from your great great grandmother who came from France." I probably was ten years old or younger when I began questioning about my "turkey-egg-like" freckled face. I tried all the fading creams I could afford with the weekly saving of my daily allowance. None of them worked. Then, one day I woke up and realized I was wasting my time with all that nonsense imaginary war I had started with the freckles of my great great granny. Since that day everything made sense and I loved every sassy little caramel colored shade in my face. I loved my roots.

Too far the Land of Long Ago! BUT the people, the same people who one day came from far away lands and made Panama their home; they have brought gold to our culture. THIS time, I am not talking about "GOLD", the one that holds the atomic number 79. This time I am referring to the kind of "gold" that enriches a culture, the one that in silence shines (...sometimes loud too!) and shares the goodness of many lands in just only one.

This is our country: Welcome to Panama! And now, it is yours too! smile

I have been working on an article with plenty delicious recipes to honor and celebrate the "Sweet Tooth" from Panama and Latin America, and I will post it soon...before the new year arrives. BUT, today after seeing what my friend and colleague, Chef Elena from the "El Amor por la Cocina" blog has rescued from her family memoirs and traditions, I thought it was a fantastic idea to share with you the LOVE and lust for our roots we have engraved in every cell of our body.

Today you will learn how to prepare: "MY FATHER'S NEW YEARS DAY BARBECUE" (or How to roast a pig the Cuban way). Including:

  • Lechón Asado a la Cubana (Roast Pork, Cuban Style)
  • Arroz Congrí (Red Beans with Rice)
  • Yuca con Mojo (Boiled Cassava with Garlic Sauce)

We hope you enjoy the beautiful holiday season, with delicious meals featuring food from all over the world (including our recipes, of course!).

Stay tuned and make sure to come back to get a fantastic selection of holiday desserts from Latin America.

Do not forget to participate in our worldwide campaign "A Menu For Hope II", to help the people affected with the earthquake in the Kashmir region of Pakistan. Just donate $5 for a chance to participate in the raffle of fantastic prizes donated by food bloggers from all over the world. For more information visit my previous post: "A Menu for Hope - Un Menu por la Esperanza II".

God bless you!

Chef Melissa

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,

panama christmas latin america navidad chef felicidad happiness new year ano nuevo recetas receta recipe recipes delicious cooking cookingdiva diva chef melissa de leon douglass elena hernandel amor cocina academia artes culinarias fabian fabien charlie collins
  • by Chef Melissa
  • December 15, 2005
  • 5:45 pm

Edible Flowers: The Red Velvet Rose of Love edit

1_1_2 I discovered flowers were edible back in my early pre-chef adventures, when I had the perfect height to hide in my great grandmother's garden and eat her favorite miniature white roses without being found. Those were great days full of pure innocent adventure and joyful rewards from mother and father nature.

The diversity and mystery of our tropical rainforest always captured my attention. Learning the value of natural medicine through my life, the healing benefits of plants and flowers, have helped me develop a natural instinct to preserve the traditional knowledge that has been carried by our cultures over the ages.

In the kitchen, this beautiful flower has a very important roll. It might sound a little odd because of the rose's romantic connotations, but in fact, roses have been eaten since ancient times. Romans were used to sprinkle rose petals on food, the table, and all over the banquet hall.

Rose petals, fresh, dried and crystallized can be added as a garnish to a salad, made into an infusion for tea and other beverages, desserts, as well as prepared into candies, marmalade, sauces, rose sugar, and soups. Rose petals, rose water and rose syrup are still widely used in the cuisines of the Middle East. Greek baklava, for instance, is originally served with a drizzle of rose syrup.

rose roses rosa rosas receta recetas recipe recipes panama chef melissa de leon douglass cooking diva cookingdiva panamagourmet gourmet edible garden cake teas kitchen beautiful blog fauchon petals red sensual sensuos medicinal plants comestibles drink cocktail
  • by Chef Melissa
  • November 29, 2005
  • 4:18 pm

Return to the Top | Page 2 of 3 pages  <  1 2 3 >

Comentarios

Archives

Recetas Deliciosas

SEE MORE

Videos

Coming soon!

Fiesta Cashew Mole with Grilled Chicken

The “mole” is one of the most enigmatic and interesting foods from the whole world. It´s preparation and final result depends upon the diversity of ingredients used from city to city in México, and the personal preferences of the cooks. It is a very personal, unique dish which with the …

read more »