πΈπ·
Surinamese Cuisine
South America's Best-Kept Secret
Americas
›
South America
1
Dishes
6
Categories
Explore
Surinamese cuisine is South America's most unexpected fusion β Indonesian, Indian, Chinese, Creole, and Javanese traditions create a food scene unlike anywhere else on the continent.
A Culinary Portrait
The heritage, flavors, and traditions of Surinamese cuisine
Surinamese cuisine is one of the world's most diverse culinary fusions, born from the extraordinary multicultural composition of a small South American nation on the Caribbean coast. Dutch colonization from the seventeenth century established the plantation economy that would draw people from four continents. Enslaved West Africans brought rice cultivation, one-pot stews, and the okra-based cooking that forms one pillar of Surinamese cuisine. After emancipation, indentured laborers from British India, the Dutch East Indies (Java), and China arrived in successive waves, each community maintaining its culinary traditions while creating uniquely Surinamese hybrid dishes.
Javanese immigrants brought nasi goreng, bami goreng, satay, and the Indonesian spice palette. Hindustani (Indian) settlers contributed roti, curry, dal, and the tandoor-style cooking that became the foundation of Surinamese roti culture. Chinese laborers introduced stir-frying, noodle soups, and soy-based seasonings.
The Maroon communities, descendants of enslaved Africans who escaped into the rainforest, preserved West African cooking traditions in remarkable purity. The Amerindian peoples contributed cassava bread, pepper pot, and forest ingredients. Dutch influence added baking traditions and certain dairy preparations. Madame Jeanette peppers (a fiery Surinamese chili), ketjap manis (sweet soy sauce from the Javanese tradition), masala spice blends (from the Hindustani tradition), cassava (used across all ethnic cuisines), and pom (a grated tayer root dish unique to Suriname).
Javanese immigrants brought nasi goreng, bami goreng, satay, and the Indonesian spice palette. Hindustani (Indian) settlers contributed roti, curry, dal, and the tandoor-style cooking that became the foundation of Surinamese roti culture. Chinese laborers introduced stir-frying, noodle soups, and soy-based seasonings.
The Maroon communities, descendants of enslaved Africans who escaped into the rainforest, preserved West African cooking traditions in remarkable purity. The Amerindian peoples contributed cassava bread, pepper pot, and forest ingredients. Dutch influence added baking traditions and certain dairy preparations. Madame Jeanette peppers (a fiery Surinamese chili), ketjap manis (sweet soy sauce from the Javanese tradition), masala spice blends (from the Hindustani tradition), cassava (used across all ethnic cuisines), and pom (a grated tayer root dish unique to Suriname).
Fiadu
Key Flavors
egg roll
beef
Masters of the Kitchen
The chefs who shaped Surinamese cuisine
Diana Dubois
Surinamese chef and culinary educator who has promoted the unique multiculturalβ¦
Click to read moreEssential Reading
The cookbooks that define Surinamese cuisine
Surinamese Cuisine
Surinamese Cuisine
A collection of recipes reflecting Suriname's extraordinarily diverse culinary heritage spanning Asian, African, and Amβ¦
Explore All Dishes
1 authentic recipes from Surinamese cuisine
Difficulty:
Time:
Sort:
Showing 1 of 1 dishes