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Cape Verdean Cuisine
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Cape Verdean cuisine blends Portuguese and West African flavors with Atlantic seafood. Cachupa, the national stew, embodies the islands' spirit of making something extraordinary from humble ingredients.
A Culinary Portrait
The heritage, flavors, and traditions of Cape Verdean cuisine
Cape Verdean cuisine is born from the volcanic archipelago in the mid-Atlantic where African and Portuguese traditions fused across five centuries of colonial history. Uninhabited before Portuguese discovery in 1456, the islands became a crossroads of the transatlantic slave trade, and the food culture that emerged blends West African staples — corn, beans, and root vegetables — with Portuguese techniques, seasonings, and seafood traditions. The islands' arid climate and limited arable land shaped a cuisine of resourcefulness, where dried, preserved, and slow-cooked foods dominate.
Portuguese influence is foundational, providing the language, wine traditions, and many cooking techniques. West African foodways, brought by enslaved peoples, contributed corn-based dishes, one-pot stews, and bean preparations.
Brazilian influence arrived through return migration. Each of the inhabited islands developed slight variations, with Santiago preserving the most African-influenced cooking and the windward islands showing stronger Portuguese character. Dried corn (the foundation of cachupa), various dried beans, dried fish, manioc (cassava), and banana.
Portuguese influence is foundational, providing the language, wine traditions, and many cooking techniques. West African foodways, brought by enslaved peoples, contributed corn-based dishes, one-pot stews, and bean preparations.
Brazilian influence arrived through return migration. Each of the inhabited islands developed slight variations, with Santiago preserving the most African-influenced cooking and the windward islands showing stronger Portuguese character. Dried corn (the foundation of cachupa), various dried beans, dried fish, manioc (cassava), and banana.
Grogue
Ponche
Key Flavors
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spirit
drink
cocktail
Masters of the Kitchen
The chefs who shaped Cape Verdean cuisine
Maria de Barros
Cape Verdean chef and cultural advocate who has promoted Cape Verdean cuisine, …
Click to read moreEssential Reading
The cookbooks that define Cape Verdean cuisine
Cozinha di Cabo Verde
Cozinha di Cabo Verde
A collection of traditional Cape Verdean recipes featuring the archipelago's unique blend of African and Portuguese cul…
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2 authentic recipes from Cape Verdean cuisine
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