Senin, 29 Maret 2010

A Culinary Look at Women in History: Indigenous Women in The Andes



Peruvian Olluquito con Charqui, recipe below



In the Indigenous societies of the Andes, women planted and harvested the fields and prepared the food. Men hunted animals and raised like stock including alpaca and llama. The women would slaughter the animals and prepare it for eating. Pre-Columbian Inca women developed dishes using a cured, slated, and dehydrated meat they called charqui. The English word Jerky comes from the Andean word charqui. The women would salt cure the meat and dry it in the hot sun and freezing cold for about a month and thereby increasing its longevity. In pre-Colombian Africa, Mande women made jerked salted and dried meat in the sun in a similar way. From the Jerked meat Andean women made a soup called Olluquito con charqui made with ollucos (a yellow Andean tuber), traditionally women used slices of jerked alpaca and llama, but today its more often made with jerked beef, and served with rice.



Olluquito con Charqui Recipe

Ingredients

4 ysp oil

1 tsp cayenne pepper

¼ kg “charqui” or jerked meat/vegan substitute

1 kg ollucos chopped in fine strips

½ cup onion

Chopped parsley

2 garlic cloves

Salt and pepper

ground chilly

Method

Shred and fry pre-soaked/hydrated Charqui. After browned, remove, and in the same oil fry onions, garlic, chilly and cayenne pepper. Add ollucos (soaked for 1 hour with salt). Cover the pot and cook at low heat. Sprinkle with parsley. Serve with white rice. Makes eight servings



Upcoming lecture March, 30, 2010

Dr. Frederick Douglass Opie

Long Island University Brooklyn Campus

Speaking about

“Black and Latino Relations in New York 1959-2008”

Tuesday, March 30, 2010, 6:00-7:30 p.m.

Health Sciences Building, Room 121.

Book signing to follow

This event is free and open to the public

For more information call 718 488-3374



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