Cachupa
Type | Stew |
---|---|
Place of origin | Cape Verde |
Main ingredients | Fish or meat (sausage, beef, goat, or chicken), corn, beans |
Cookbook: Cachupa Media: Cachupa |
Cachupa (Portuguese pronunciation: [kɐˈʃupɐ], Cape Verdean Creole, Badiu: Kachupa) is a famous dish from the Cape Verde islands, West Africa. This slow cooked stew of corn (hominy), beans, cassava, sweet potato, fish or meat (sausage, beef, goat or chicken) is often referred to as the country's national dish.[1] Each island has its own regional variation. The version of the recipe called cachupa rica tends to have more ingredients than the simpler, cachupa pobre.
Cachupa frita
Cachupa leftovers are often re-fried, the resulting dish being called cachupa frita, cachupa guisada or cachupa refogada, meaning "fried cachupa". This dish may be served for breakfast with a fried egg and a fried local sausage (linguiça) or fried mackerel.[2][3]
Legacy
Carmen Souza's fifth and most recent studio album, titled as Kachupada (the Badiu form) is about this traditional food, it was released in 2013.
See also
Notes
- ↑ Raymond Almeida. "Cachupa di Cabo Verde". UMassD.
- ↑ "Mae Preta" (in Portuguese).
- ↑ "Sabor Crioulo" (in Portuguese).
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cachupa. |