©Copyright MSCOMM Thanks to The Jamaica Tourist Board for their collaboration
Photo: Blue Mountain Coffee Beans
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Recipes
Jamaica's
history is told by
the food
Jamaicans eat.
The cassava the
Arawaks grew is
used today as
"bammie," a
toasted flat cake
eaten with fried
fish. The Maroons, always on the run, devised a way
of spicing and slow cooking pork that they called
"jerking", today's visitor tastes jerk chicken and fish
as well. To feed the slaves cheaply and well, the
ackee fruit was brought from Africa, as were
breadfruit and a variety of yams and root vegetables.
The Africans carried their own culinary secrets with
them, including duckunoo, a steamed pudding made
of green bananas and coconut. Breadfruit arrived on
the island courtesy of Captain William Bligh, of
Bounty fame. And the ubiquitous meat patties sold
by roadside vendors are a direct, but much spicier,
descendent of English meat pasties.
Curried goat, a popular island dish often served with
rice and peas, dates to 1845 when -- following the
abolition of slavery -- plantation owners began
importing indentured laborers from India and later
China; the new arrivals quickly added their own
contributions, including curry and other spices, to
the island's expanding palette of exotic flavors.
In addition to indigenous vegetables like cho-cho,
which tastes a little like squash, and callaloo, which
is similar to spinach and used in pepperpot soup,
Jamaica's lively markets are piled high with
bananas, coconuts and pineapples, as well as the
more exotic guineps, pawpaws, sweetsops -- and
the star apple that, when mixed with oranges and
condensed milk, makes a delicious dessert called
"matrimony."
The native
pimento tree,
the source of
allspice, adds
itself to
numerous
Jamaican
dishes. So do
ginger, garlic,
nutmeg and
Scotch Bonnet peppers, considered the hottest on
earth. These may or not be a key ingredient of the
island's famous Pickapeppa Sauce -- the recipe is a
closely guarded secret -- but they're essential when
it comes to making the mouth-searing jerked pork,
chicken and fish for which Jamaica is equally
famous.
A technique thought to originate with the Maroons,
descendents of slaves who escaped from their
Spanish masters to the island's most remote
mountain areas, "jerked" meat is marinated for
hours in an incendiary mixture of peppers, pimento
seeds, scallion, thyme and nutmeg, then cooked
over an outdoor pit lined with pimento wood. The low
heat allows the meat to cook slowly, so it loses little
of its natural juices while becoming saturated with
the flavor of the wood.
Jerk stands can be found all over the island.
Rastafarian I-tal, or vegetarian, meals abound in
Negril. In the Middle Quarters area of the South
Coast, dried peppered shrimp are sold by the bag.
Delicacies like Stamp and Go (saltfish cakes eaten
as appetizers) and mackerel Run-Down (whole
salted mackerel simmered in coconut milk,
tomatoes, onions, scallions, thyme and hot peppers,
and served with boiled green bananas or yams) can
be enjoyed island-wide.
100% Jamaican Coffee The coffee industry on this Caribbean island began
in 1725 when its governor brought seedlings from
Martinique and planted them on his estate. About
60,000 Jamaican farmers now grow coffee, some
producing as little as five pounds of green beans
each year.
Mountains cover four-fifths of the country, with
the Blue Mountains, in the east, reaching a height
of 7,400 feet. Coffee is planted on terraces on the
mountains' slopes, 1,500 to 5,000 feet above sea
level, and is often shaded by avocado and banana
trees. Harvesting of the crop--which is all arabica
coffee--occurs in August and September.
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