cuban cuisine Archives | Florida Girl Cooks http://floridagirlcooks.com Seeker of sunshine + exquisite food Mon, 02 May 2022 22:50:50 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.0 96532064 Cuban Yuca http://floridagirlcooks.com/cuban-yuca/ http://floridagirlcooks.com/cuban-yuca/#respond Sun, 15 May 2022 22:40:00 +0000 http://floridagirlcooks.com/?p=2853 I wasn’t the biggest fan of Cuban yuca growing up. I know. That sounds purely insane so crucify me if you must. As I have aged I have developed the palate and appreciation for ...

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I wasn’t the biggest fan of Cuban yuca growing up. I know. That sounds purely insane so crucify me if you must. As I have aged I have developed the palate and appreciation for yuca. What makes Cuban Yuca perfect is no doubt the mojo mix. This one is almost impossible to mess up and the more garlic, the better of course. Serve with rice, black beans, pork, and tostones and enjoy!

Cuban Yuca

Ingredients

  • 3 lbs. Yuca
  • 1 yellow onion, thinly sliced
  • 10 cloves garlic, minced
  • 3/4 cup Sour Orange
  • 1 cup olive oil

Prepare

  1. First, boil the yuca in a large pot for about 20 minutes or until tender enough to break with a fork.
  2. Drain the yuca and place in a casserole dish or deep baking dish.
  3. In a separate saute pot, heat up the olive oil with onions until they start to become soft and translucent.
  4. Add the garlic, salt and pepper, and then the sour orange and cook for one more minute.
  5. Off the heat and pour the mojo mixture all over the yuca.
  6. Finally, bake the yuca in an oven at 450 degrees F for 30 minutes.
  7. Serve with, rice, beans, Cuban pork, and tostones and enjoy!

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Tostones http://floridagirlcooks.com/tostones/ Sun, 23 Apr 2017 22:19:36 +0000 http://floridagirlcooks.com/?p=1280 Tostones Growing up in my house, you didn’t need to be in the kitchen to know when my mom was making tostones. The smell of fried banana goodness would hit you if you were ...

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Tostones

Growing up in my house, you didn’t need to be in the kitchen to know when my mom was making tostones. The smell of fried banana goodness would hit you if you were in your room or a few houses down playing with your friends. They were one of the most inexpensive but yet delicious treats that my mom often made for us. Simply fried and then lightly salted, it’s all you needed to fulfill you every comfort food dream come true. 

Continuing the Tradition

I’ve continued the tradition and can surely find my sons running to the kitchen shortly into frying up some delicious tostones. This particular recipe is exactly like that of my mom’s and is found in the Cuba! cookbook. I hope that one day they would continue our cultural culinary traditions by making these alongside some of the other delicious Cuban food staples. 

Tostones

Ingredients

4 green plantains, peeled and cut into 1.5 inch lengths
vegetable oil, for frying
sea salt of choice

Prepare

1.Heat at least 3 inches of oil in a large, heavy pot to 325 degrees Fahrenheit.

2. Working in batches, fry the plantain slices for 5 to 6 minutes, until they are light golden and softened. Not browned.

3. Remove the slices from the oil with a slotted spoon and set aside to cool slightly.

4. Increase the heat to 375 degrees Fahrenheit.

5. When the plantain slices are just cool enough to handle, smash them flat. You can use a tostonera, tortilla press, or two pieces of wooden cutting board, using even pressure when smashing down.

6. Return the plantains to the hot oil and fry until they are crispy, 3 to 5 minutes.

7. Transfer the tostones to paper towels to drain. Sprinkle them with salt while hot and serve immediately.

Tostones
Serves 6
Write a review
Print
Prep Time
10 min
Cook Time
10 min
Total Time
20 min
Prep Time
10 min
Cook Time
10 min
Total Time
20 min
Ingredients
  1. 4 green plantains, peeled and cut into 1.5 inch lengths
  2. vegetable oil, for frying
  3. sea salt of choice
Instructions
  1. Heat at least 3 inches of oil in a large, heavy pot to 325 degrees Fahrenheit.
  2. Working in batches, fry the plantain slices for 5 to 6 minutes, until they are light golden and softened. Not browned.
  3. Remove the slices from the oil with a slotted spoon and set aside to cool slightly.
  4. Increase the heat to 375 degrees Fahrenheit.
  5. When the plantain slices are just cool enough to handle, smash them flat. You can use a tostonera, tortilla press, or two pieces of wooden cutting board, using even pressure when smashing down.
  6. Return the plantains to the hot oil and fry until they are crispy, 3 to 5 minutes.
  7. Transfer the tostones to paper towels to drain. Sprinkle them with salt while hot and serve immediately.
Adapted from Cuba! Recipes and Stories From the Cuban Kitchen
Adapted from Cuba! Recipes and Stories From the Cuban Kitchen
Florida Girl Cooks http://floridagirlcooks.com/
tostones, fried plantains, platanos, cuban food, cuban cooking, florida girl cooks

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JIBARITOS http://floridagirlcooks.com/jibaritos/ Wed, 05 Apr 2017 17:10:10 +0000 http://floridagirlcooks.com/?p=1153 Jibaritos Hello to my Florida Girl Cooks blog fans! This week I present to you yet another exciting recipe post from the Cuba! cookbook. Jibaritos is a dish I’ve heard and known nothing about ...

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Jibaritos

Hello to my Florida Girl Cooks blog fans! This week I present to you yet another exciting recipe post from the Cuba! cookbook. Jibaritos is a dish I’ve heard and known nothing about until picking up this cookbook. There are a lot of traditional Cuban dishes I grew up surrounded by. Some examples are congris, tostones, picadillo, ropa vieja, yuca, pastelitos, and the always desired at every party or excuse to have a party, lechon, just to name a few.

The new age of Cuban recipes began after the official start of communism. With less access to specific ingredients via rations, the people of Cuba had to flex their creative culinary muscles to come up with new dishes, such as the jibaritos. My family, especially my sons thoroughly enjoyed every bite of this meal. We hope you enjoy it as well!

My Cuban Roots

Digging into the my culinary roots and what it has evolved into beyond my parents leaving Cuba has been fascinating thus far. This book has been really been making me want to visit Cuba. Albeit, when I do go it won’t be the sunshine and puppy dogs version of what my parents grew up in. I’ve heard stories my whole life about our Cuban families’ struggles. In short, if you stayed in Cuba during the Castro, and now presently Raul Castro regime, you either followed communism and were provided a good life or you turned tour cheek to it and succumbed to living in near poverty. The life of going to the local market to receive your weekly supply of rations is one that has been lived by my family in Cuba. Most weeks there wasn’t food that otherwise we would find at the local grocery store. Even your electricity to your house is rationed and cut off after a certain time, nightly.

Jibaritos

Ingredients

10 cloves garlic, peeled
1/2 tsp whole cumin seed
1/2 tsp tsp dried oregano
1 cup bottles sour orange juice, or 1/3 cup freshly squeezed orange juice mixed with 3 tbsp freshly squeezed lime juice
3 boneless chicken breasts, split into cutlets
1/2 cup vegetable oil for frying
salt and freshly ground pepper
1 cup chicken stock
4 green plantains, peeled and halved both lengthwise and crosswise

Green Olive Aioli

Ingredients

1/4 tsp salt
5 cloves garlic, minced
2 tbsp freshly squeezed lemon juice
1/2 cup chopped green olives
freshly ground pepper

Prepare

1. Drop the garlic, one clove at a time, into a food processor with the motor running.

2. When all of the garlic is chopped, add the cumin, oregano, salt, and juice. Process until the mixture is foamy.

3. Place the chicken in a large zip-lock bag and pour marinade over it. Refrigerate for 2 hours turning occasionally to redistribute the marinade.

4. Preheat the oven to 300 degrees Fahrenheit.

5. Remove the chicken, reserving the marinade.

6. Pat the chicken dry using paper towels.

Heat the oil over high heat in a heavy-bottomed skillet, preferably cast-iron.

7. Sprinkle the chicken on both sides with salt and pepper.

8. Carefully add the chicken to the pan using tongs. Brown one side,then flip and brown the second side. When the chicken is browned all over, pour in the reserved marinade and the stock. Cover the pan tightly with aluminium foil and place it in the oven. Let the chicken braise until it is fork tender, about 1 hour.

9. Remove the chicken from the skillet and set it aside to cool slightly. Place the skillet containing the braising liquid over high heat and reduce it by about one quarter.

10. Using two forks, pull apart the chicken into generous bite-size chunks. Add a few spoonfuls of the reduced braising liquid to the chicken and toss to coat. Set chicken aside.

11. Heat at least 4 inches of oil in a large, heavy pot to 325 degrees Farhenheit. Add the plantain pieces to the hot oil and cook for 4 to 5 minutes, until the pieces float.

12. Remove the plantains using a slotted spoon and transfer them to paper towels to drain. Increase the heat under the frying oil and allow the oil to heat to 375 degrees Fahrenheit.

13. When the plantains are just cool enough to handle, smash them flat with a heavy pan or by placing them between two cutting boards and pressing down. If you have a Mexican tortilla press handy…this item will work the BEST, as I used for mine. 

14. Return the plantains to the hot oil until they are crispy, about 5 minutes.

Aioli

Prepare

1. Sprinkle salt over the minced garlic on a cutting board and use the side of a knife to mas the salt into the garlic, making a paste.

2. Stir the garlic paste into the mayonnaise, then add the lemon juice, green olives, and pepper to taste. Taste and add salt and lemon juice, if necessary.

 

jibaritos, cuban jibaritos, cuba cookbook, cuba, cuban cuisine, cuba cooking, florida girl cooks

jibaritos, cuban jibaritos, cuba cookbook, cuba, cuban cuisine, cuba cooking, florida girl cooks

jibaritos, cuban jibaritos, cuba cookbook, cuba, cuban cuisine, cuba cooking, florida girl cooks

Jibaritos
Serves 4
Write a review
Print
Prep Time
2 hr 30 min
Cook Time
35 min
Total Time
3 hr 5 min
Prep Time
2 hr 30 min
Cook Time
35 min
Total Time
3 hr 5 min
Ingredients
  1. Jibaritos
  2. 10 cloves garlic, peeled
  3. 1/2 tsp whole cumin seed
  4. 1/2 tsp tsp dried oregano
  5. 1 cup bottles sour orange juice, or 1/3 cup freshly squeezed orange juice mixed with 3 tbsp freshly squeezed lime juice
  6. 3 boneless chicken breasts, split into cutlets
  7. 1/2 cup vegetable oil for frying
  8. salt and freshly ground pepper
  9. 1 cup chicken stock
  10. 4 green plantains, peeled and halved both lengthwise and crosswise
  11. Green Olive Aioli
  12. Ingredients
  13. 1/4 tsp salt
  14. 5 cloves garlic, minced
  15. 2 tbsp freshly squeezed lemon juice
  16. 1/2 cup chopped green olives
  17. freshly ground pepper
Instructions
  1. Jibaritos
  2. Drop the garlic, one clove at a time, into a food processor with the motor running.
  3. When all of the garlic is chopped, add the cumin, oregano, salt, and juice. Process until the mixture is foamy.
  4. Place the chicken in a large zip-lock bag and pour marinade over it. Refrigerate for 2 hours turning occasionally to redistribute the marinade.
  5. Preheat the oven to 300 degrees Fahrenheit.
  6. Remove the chicken, reserving the marinade.
  7. Pat the chicken dry using paper towels.
  8. Heat the oil over high heat in a heavy-bottomed skillet, preferably cast-iron.
  9. Sprinkle the chicken on both sides with salt and pepper.
  10. Carefully add the chicken to the pan using tongs. Brown one side, then flip and brown the second side. When the chicken is browned all over, pour in the reserved marinade and the stock. Cover the pan tightly with aluminium foil and place it in the oven. Let the chicken braise until it is fork tender, about 1 hour.
  11. Remove the chicken from the skillet and set it aside to cool slightly. Place the skillet containing the braising liquid over high heat and reduce it by about one quarter.
  12. Using two forks, pull apart the chicken into generous bite-size chunks. Add a few spoonfuls of the reduced braising liquid to the chicken and toss to coat. Set chicken aside.
  13. Heat at least 4 inches of oil in a large, heavy pot to 325 degrees Farhenheit. Add the plantain pieces to the hot oil and cook for 4 to 5 minutes, until the pieces float.
  14. Remove the plantains using a slotted spoon and transfer them to paper towels to drain. Increase the heat under the frying oil and allow the oil to heat to 375 degrees Fahrenheit.
  15. When the plantains are just cool enough to handle, smash them flat with a heavy pan or by placing them between two cutting boards and pressing down.
  16. Return the plantains to the hot oil until they are crispy, about 5 minutes.
  17. Aioli
  18. Sprinkle salt over the minced garlic on a cutting board and use the side of a knife to mas the salt into the garlic, making a paste.
  19. Stir the garlic paste into the mayonnaise, then add the lemon juice, green olives, and pepper to taste. Taste and add salt and lemon juice, if necessary.
Adapted from ¡Cuba! Recipes and Stories from the Cuban Kitchen
Adapted from ¡Cuba! Recipes and Stories from the Cuban Kitchen
Florida Girl Cooks http://floridagirlcooks.com/
jibaritos, cuban jibaritos, cuba cookbook, cuba, cuban cuisine, cuba cooking, florida girl cooks

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