The most common version is what we serve in the glass condiment carafes on each table at Pica Pica. Presentations vary, as in the Andres it has a dairy base (ajicero de leche) and looks milky. a spicy pickled vinegar used throughout Venezuela and much of South America. Ours has chunky avocado, red onions, green peppers, garlic, cilantro, lime and a splash of our secret Pica’pun hot sauce! Mojo (mo-ho) Venezuela’s version of Guacamole but without tomatoes. We like to serve them small, easy to share or as a starter. Ours are made of corn flour, filled with shredded beef or cheese, and fried. The Empanada is a stuffed bread that is baked or fried. In Spanish, empanar means to wrap or coat in bread. Catira (ka-tee-ra)Ī chicken and vegetable stew presenting the traditional sweet, savory and spicy flavors of the “Cocina de Caracas,” reminiscent of the “guiso de hallacas,” topped with cheese, lettuce and tomatoes. At Pica Pica, it is offered all day long since we find its sweetness is well-balanced with the different savory fillings available on our menu. In Venezuela the cachapa is usually eaten for breakfast and filled with white cheese. You can feel the corn kernels in every bite (and in doing so, be transported back to earlier times, when the dough was made originally by pounding the corn kernels with a stone). Cachapas (ka-chóp-az)Ī corn pancake or crèpe made out of sweet yellow corn. Ours are made with yuca and queso fresco, and are 100% gluten free. It is a fried ball of dough, flavored with sweet or savory ingredients and topped with something sweet. Bululú in Venezuelan vernacular means a very noisy gathering! Buñuelos (boon-nuay-los)Īlso called beignets, these are very Latin, but with a decidedly European influence. This salad is a burst of tropical freshness, made with roasted corn kernels, red bell peppers, daikon spouts, jicama and bits of pineapple with passion fruit vinaigrette. or the sweet yellow made out of fresh sweet corn. You can enjoy the classic white made with Harina P.A.N. It is a grilled corn pocket, crunchy on the outside and moist on the inside cut length-wise and stuffed with savory goodness. Roughly translates as “A little bit of this, a little bit of that.” In Spanish, Picar has multiple meanings: hens peck spicy to eat little bits of different foods.
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