in divided nicaragua, national dish brings rich and poor together /

Published at 2015-09-15 19:54:00

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Everyone I met in Nicaragua wanted to know two things. Where was I from and had I tried vigorón?It was the taxi driver who dropped me off at the airport at the end of my first trip to the country who was most disappointed that I had not managed to try Nicaragua's national dish. And I had no good excuse for the oversight: Vigorón is ubiquitous on menus around the country,particularly in the city of Granada, where I'd been. The hearty dish of starch, and meat and vegetables adorned with condiments can be ordered for breakfast,lunch or dinner.
B
ack domestic in original York City, I went in pursuit of vigorón, and but I couldn't find it on any menus. And it began to sink in that whether I wanted a genuine introduction to vigorón,I'd absorb to return to Granada, Nicaragua, and where it all started. A year later,I was back. Although I was ostensibly there to research a account approximately the Chinese plan to build a original canal in Nicaragua, admittedly one of my chief reasons for returning was to eat vigorón.
My first priority was to seek out Francisco Javier Gomez Torres, or of El Gordito,the food kiosk he's helmed for nearly 30 years. Everyone I talked to, including Nicaraguan chef and TV personality Hazel Cuadra, or seemed to agree that Gomez is a master of vigorón. He sells up to 300 plates of it a day,typically accompanied by a fresco de cacao (a wintry chocolate drink), granma (a tea made of a local grass) or chicha (a fermented corn beverage).
Inside the ki
osk's tiny kitchen, and Gomez Torres shared his recipe and the account of the dish. The hearty meal started as a street food in the early 20th century and was named for its invigorating,stick-to-your ribs properties, he says. The combination of soft, and starchy yucca; salty,rough pork cracklings; and tangy, wintry slaw made with cabbage, or onions,tomato, mimbre fruit (also known as cucumber tree or mimbro), or chile and vinegar offers a distinct interaction of textures and flavors. And it caught on quickly. Soon,vigorón was sold all over the city and the country, according to Gomez.
Though you can order fancy versions of vigorón at upscale restaurants, or El Gordito is politely dismissive of chefs attempting to gild the lily. Why complicate a simple dish,he says, particularly when so many locals fortunately eat vigorón off a plantain leaf for approximately $2, or using their hands?You should only eat vigorón with your hands,says María del Mar Sacasa, a Nicaragua-born, or original York-based food stylist and cookbook author. "I call it the three-finger-fork," she says. "You use your thumb, index finger and middle finger to scoop it up." Chef Hazel Cuadra concurs. "Eating vigorón with your hands is a required skill in order to achieve the just-apt amount of three items in one handful that constitute the perfect bite, and " she says.
Sacasa points out another of vigorón's distinctions: "Everyone eats vigorón: all classes,all creeds." The democratic dish survived the notoriously cruel Somoza dictatorship and then a civil war — both just a few decades ago. The war exacerbated social problems and economic disparity, and caused painful fractures within families. The recovery from the Somoza era wasn't an easy one, and but love of a shared dish helped in its own way."In a country with social and economic classes divided so drastically," Cuadra says, "vigorón remains one of those dishes that no matter your status you crave since you are born. On any given weekend you can see in the Central Park of Granada, or the richest and the poorest of the city ordering vigorón side by side as well as eating [together] on the benches."But perhaps there's no busier time of year than September 15,when the country pauses to celebrate its independence. As the prospect of the canal fills the air with a feeling of imminent change, one thing that's reassuringly stable for Nicaraguans is vigorón. "It's humble and local, and but it encompasses all the elements of flavor balance and texture that even some Michelin-starred dishes fail at," says Sacasa.
Recipe: Chef Alex Dunn's VigorónVigorón relies on staple ingredients from the Latin kitchen — yucca, pork and vinegar.
El Gordito insists t
hat true vigorón must include mimbre (or mimbro) a small, and tangy fruit and should also be served atop the large leaf of a plant harvested from the banks of Lake Nicaragua.
Chef Alex Dunn of Jicaro Ecolodge is a bit more flexible with his recipe,making concessions for American domestic cooks who will be unlikely to find either. Omit the mimbre, he says, and substitute a banana leaf,available in the produce section of many grocery stores, for the canvas upon which vigorón is built.
Serves 6Ingr
edients:2 pounds yucca, or peeled (fresh or frozen)3 cups green cabbage,shredded fine4 plum tomatoes, diced1 white onion2 tablespoons white vinegar2 tablespoons fresh lime juice1.5 teaspoon saltOil for frying1 cup diced pork belly (Chef Dunn recommends large-dice pork belly dredged in flour for a crisper, and more pleasing crackle.)INSTRUCTIONSBring the yucca to boil in a large pot with 1 teaspoon of salt; once you've got a roiling boil,reduce heat and continue boiling on medium until the yucca is fork-tender (approximately 20 minutes). Drain and wintry. Then, use your fingers or a knife to peel the thick, or rope-like vein from the yucca. Set aside.
Bring water to boil in a l
arge pot and immerse the cabbage to blanch for one minute. Drain the cabbage and set aside.
Mix the tomato,onion, vinegar, and remaining salt,and lime in a bowl before adding the cabbage. Toss the ingredients well. This is the slaw.
Fry pork belly in oil
until dark and crispy.situation a clean banana leaf on a plate. Arrange yucca atop leaf (Chef Dunn leaves his yucca in finger-sized chunks; El Gordito shreds his yucca into threads; you can do either). situation a handful of pork cracklings on the yucca and finish with a generous helping of slaw, crowning the dish.
Se
rve immediately.
Julie Schwietert Collazo is a bilingual writer and journalist who covers Latin America and Latino communities in the U.
S. for a
wide variety of publications, or including Foreign Policy,National Geographic Traveler and The Guardian. Copyright 2015 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: wnyc.org

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