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| Articles Articles, features, news, musings and reflections from the Aunties and guest authors about the Dominican culinary culture and the pleasures of eating and cooking. |
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The main agricultural crop in the Dominican Republic is sugar, so it is not surprising that sweets are an important part of Dominican cuisine. The national passion for very sweet coffee is a testament to the Dominican "sweet tooth" so it follows that Dominicans should adore their sweets, cakes and desserts. Some Dominican dessert favorites, like creme caramel/flan, bread pudding/pudin de pan, dulce de leche and rice pudding/arroz con leche, are not exclusively Dominican, but many others are typically Dominican and provide a mouth-watering reflection of the abundant riches of the land. Dominican foremothers were certainly creative and inventive in devising the most delicious preparations with what the land has to offer. Tropical fruits that grow in the Dominican Republic, like papaya, guava and pineapple; grains like corn, and even root vegetables like sweet potato all find their way into dessert dishes. Coconut and peanuts also feature heavily in Dominican sweets. The more unusual dishes deserve a special mention. Majarete is a yummy creamy pudding based on sweet corn, sold on roadsides and at all Dominican cake shops. The humble sweet potato is made into a tasty jalea de batata or pan de batata. Arepa in the Dominican Republic is a sweet pudding, made with coconut and maize. It is nothing like its Venezuelan namesake which is a blandish savory pattie. Jalao is a cheap and cheerful sweetmeat made with coconut and honey, lovely with coffee as a light sweet after a meal or as a roadside snack. Coconetes, simple coconut cookies, are sold at every colmado. Roasted peanuts are used to make the toasty and tasty tooth-crunching dulce de mani, but who could forget habichuelas con dulce? This sweet bean cream is traditionally eaten at Easter time, and has a special place in the heart of all Dominicans. Exiles yearn for it, and every visitor to a Dominican home during the habichuelas con dulce season, having eaten their fill, is rarely allowed to leave the house without at least a week's supply. Foreigners usually approach this concoction with caution, unaccustomed as they are to the alien concept of eating sweetened beans. Then we have the empress of all Dominican desserts, the Dominican cake, compulsory for all special occasions and celebrations. You just have to read our Dominican Cooking forums to see the reverence, pride and passions it inspires, and the perfectionism and love that goes into creating this elaborate culinary work of art. Different parts of the Dominican Republic have their typical regional sweets and desserts, perhaps the most famous being Bani, in the south west of the country. Santo Domingo's colonial zone is home to several specialist sweet shops selling a wide range of these Dominican sweetmeats. All these wonderful sweets and desserts are distinctively, deliciously Dominican. It is strange though, that coffee and cocoa, the most important Dominican crops along with sugar, do not appear as ingredients in Dominican dessert recipes. Or is Dominican coffee, served sweeter than sweet, a dessert in itself when downed after a meal? Aunt Ilana |
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#1
By
loripilar
on
07-12-2007, 09:00 PM
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| desserts Dominican desserts are the best!!!!!!!!!!! Anything with coconut is delicious, especially Dulce de coco en pote, not everyone makes it, but it is the very best. Then you have close seconds like ajonjoli, jalao, and dulce de tomate en pote. all this dessert talk makes me hungry and homesick. I think i'll go make a flan to feel better.Ciao ![]() |
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#2
By
Aunt Clara
on
07-12-2007, 09:17 PM
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| Ajonjoli is one of my favorites. Check the recipe in the Recipes section. |
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#4
By
Aunt Clara
on
07-20-2007, 12:04 PM
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| I am glad it worked. Always a pleasure. ![]() |