Ecuadorian Cuisine
Four Worlds of Flavor
Ecuadorian cuisine spans coast, highlands, Amazon, and Galapagos — each with distinct traditions. Ceviche, llapingachos, and hornado reflect incredible biodiversity on the plate.
A Culinary Portrait
The heritage, flavors, and traditions of Ecuadorian cuisine
Spanish colonizers arrived in 1534, bringing wheat, rice, cattle, citrus, and Mediterranean cooking methods. The colonial blending of indigenous and Spanish traditions created the mestizo cuisine that defines most of Ecuador today.
African influences arrived through the coastal province of Esmeraldas, where Afro-Ecuadorian communities developed distinctive coconut-based seafood preparations. Ecuador's four distinct culinary regions, the costa (coast), sierra (highlands), oriente (Amazon), and the Galapagos, each maintain their own ingredient palettes and cooking techniques, united by a shared love of aji (hot pepper sauce), corn, and potatoes. Aji (fresh hot pepper sauce, present at every meal), achiote (annatto seeds for color and subtle flavor), tomate de arbol (tree tomato, used in sauces and juices), platanos (plantains in both green and ripe preparations), and queso fresco (fresh white cheese used as a garnish and filling).
Ceviche Ecuatoriano
Key Flavors
Masters of the Kitchen
The chefs who shaped Ecuadorian cuisine
Michelle O. Fried
American food writer who has lived in Ecuador for decades and authored the clas…
Click to read moreAlejandra Espinoza
Head chef of SOMOS restaurant in Quito, specializing in contemporary Ecuadorian…
Click to read moreEssential Reading
The cookbooks that define Ecuadorian cuisine
Comidas del Ecuador
The classic Ecuadorian cookbook that has sold over 50,000 copies, capturing traditional flavors and nutritional value o…
The Ecuador Cookbook
Traditional vegetarian and seafood recipes from Ecuador compiled by a Peace Corps veteran who discovered the country's …
Explore All Dishes
1 authentic recipes from Ecuadorian cuisine