Guanime

Guanimes a dish that can be tracked back to pre-Columbian era in Puerto Rico.

Origin

Guanimes are related to tamales and hallacas. Cornmeal masa is wrapped in corn husk stuffed with meat, nuts, fish, beans, or nothing at all. They are then boiled like tamales and hallacas. Taínos in Puerto Rico also mashed cassava and malanga into the cornmeal masa and wrapped these root and cornmeal guanimes in malanga leaf. This later became the modern day pasteles.

Modern Puerto Rico

There are two well known guanimes in Puerto Rico one made with cornmeal or cornflour and the other with flour. Guanimes are prepare with coconut milk, anise, honey and grated plantain or cassava. A small amount of the dough (masa) is then put onto banana leaves forming into small logs, wrap and tied on both ends. Once wrap they are boiled in salt water.

See also

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 5/29/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.