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Cuban Cuisine

Sabor del Caribe

Other Americas
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Cuban cuisine is soul food of the Caribbean — slow-cooked meats, citrus-garlic mojo, rice and beans, and tropical flavors shaped by Spanish, African, and indigenous Taino traditions. Simple ingredients, extraordinary depth.

A Culinary Portrait

The heritage, flavors, and traditions of Cuban cuisine

Cuban cuisine emerged from the collision of Taino indigenous traditions, Spanish colonial cooking, and African culinary knowledge brought by enslaved peoples over four centuries. The Taino cultivated cassava, sweet potato, corn, and peppers, and their method of slow-roasting meat (barbacoa) provided a foundation that subsequent cultures built upon. Spanish colonists introduced rice, citrus, cattle, and the sofrito technique of building flavor from sauteed aromatics.

Enslaved Africans brought plantains, okra, and techniques for frying and stewing that became inseparable from the Cuban kitchen. Cuba's position as a Caribbean crossroads brought additional influences from Chinese immigrants who arrived in the nineteenth century, introducing stir-frying and soy-based seasonings, and from French colonists fleeing Haiti who brought sophisticated baking and coffee cultivation.

The Cuban Revolution of 1959 and subsequent trade embargo reshaped the cuisine, forcing cooks to adapt traditional recipes to limited ingredients, a challenge met with remarkable creativity and resilience. Mojo (a garlic-citrus marinade of sour orange juice, garlic, cumin, and oregano), black beans (the soul of Cuban cooking, slow-simmered daily in most households), sofrito (onion, garlic, and green pepper sauteed in olive oil as the base of countless dishes), plantains (green for tostones, ripe for maduros, used at nearly every meal), and cumin (the spice that most distinguishes Cuban seasoning from other Caribbean cuisines).

Key Flavors

coffee drink cocktail drink

Masters of the Kitchen

The chefs who shaped Cuban cuisine

Nitza Villapol

Legendary Cuban chef, teacher, and TV host (1923-1998), often called the 'Cuban…

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Nitza Villapol

Legendary Cuban chef, teacher, and TV host (1923-1998), often called the 'Cuban Julia Child.' Her TV show Cocina al Minuto ran for decades, and her cookbook became the culinary bible of Cuban households.

Guillermo Pernot

Esquire's Chef of the Year and James Beard Award winner for Best Chef Mid-Atlan…

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Guillermo Pernot

Esquire's Chef of the Year and James Beard Award winner for Best Chef Mid-Atlantic. His cookbook Cuba Cooks celebrates the bold flavors and techniques of Cuba's finest paladares.

Essential Reading

The cookbooks that define Cuban cuisine

Cuba: The Cookbook Madelaine Vazquez Galvez

Cuba: The Cookbook

Madelaine Vazquez Galvez · 2018

350 home-cooking recipes exploring Cuba's culinary traditions and influences, compiled by a chef with over 30 years of …

Memories of a Cuban Kitchen Mary Urrutia Randelman and Joan Schwartz

Memories of a Cuban Kitchen

Mary Urrutia Randelman and Joan Schwartz · 1992

More than 200 traditional recipes combining Spanish, Indian, African, Chinese, and Portuguese influences from pre-Castr…

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2 authentic recipes from Cuban cuisine

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