Puerto Rican Cuisine
Boricua Flavor
Puerto Rican cuisine is a vibrant blend of Taino, Spanish, and African influences. Mofongo, sofrito-based stews, and arroz con gandules are the pillars of Boricua cooking.
A Culinary Portrait
The heritage, flavors, and traditions of Puerto Rican cuisine
The sofrito, a slow-cooked base of tomatoes, peppers (aji dulce), onions, garlic, cilantro, and culantro (recao), is the flavor foundation of Puerto Rican cooking, appearing in nearly every savory dish. The Taino legacy lives in the use of achiote (annatto) for coloring, the centrality of root vegetables (viandas), and the technique of wrapping food in banana leaves. African influence is perhaps the most underrecognized contribution, visible in the prominence of plantains, the development of mofongo and other mashed preparations, and the bold seasoning profile.
American influence since 1898 has introduced processed foods and fast food, though traditional cooking has proven resilient. Sofrito (the aromatic base of all Puerto Rican cooking), achiote/annatto (for golden color and mild flavor), aji dulce (sweet peppers, not hot), plantains (in every stage of ripeness), and recao/culantro (the sawtooth herb distinct from cilantro).
Piononos
Key Flavors
Masters of the Kitchen
The chefs who shaped Puerto Rican cuisine
Wilo Benet
One of Puerto Rico's most famous celebrity chefs, widely known as the godfather…
Click to read moreJose Enrique
Puerto Rican chef who graduated from the Culinary Institute of America and retu…
Click to read moreEssential Reading
The cookbooks that define Puerto Rican cuisine
Cocina Criolla
Known as 'El Libro' - the Puerto Rican cooking bible, this is the standard reference for classic Puerto Rican dishes wi…
Puerto Rico: True Flavors
Covers classics like alcapurrias and pernil with tips for modern cooks, a photo how-to section, and an ingredient gloss…
Explore All Dishes
1 authentic recipes from Puerto Rican cuisine