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Hallaca

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Hallaca
Hallaca and Pan de jamón
Alternative namesAyaca, Hayaca, Guanimo, Tamal, Pasteles en Hojas
TypeDumpling
Region or stateLatin America
Main ingredientscornmeal dough or cassava dough, meat (beef, pork, chicken), raisins, capers, olives
VariationsPasteles, Guanime, Alcapurrias

Hallaca (Spanish pronunciation: [aˈʎaka], [aˈʝaka]; alt. spelling, hayaca and ayaca[1]) is a dish from Venezuela. It consists of corn dough stuffed with a stew of beef, pork, or chicken and other ingredients such as raisins, capers, and olives[2] Like some tamales, hallacas are folded in plantain leaves, tied with strings, and boiled; The dish is traditionally served during the Christmas season and has several regional variants in Venezuela. It has been described as a national dish of Venezuela but it can be found also in variants. Some speculate it originated from the Orinoquia.[1] A characteristic of the hallaca is the delicate corn dough made with consommé or broth and lard colored with annatto. Hallacas are also commonly consumed in eastern Cuba[3][4] parts of Colombia, Ecuador, Aruba, and Curaçao.

Origins

Hallaca is a Mesoamerican tamal-like dish that goes by various names and spread throughout the Spanish kingdoms in the Americas as far south as Argentina in the decades following the conquest.[citation needed] It is said to have been invented by slaves during the colonial era.[5] The slaves would prepare the Christmas Eve meal for the landowners and with leftover meat they made the hallacas filling for their own Christmas meal. One version of the dishes origin tale has it that the daughter of the landowning family asked to taste the hallacas. She and her family liked the dish so much they requested for it to be made for their dinner party and ever since it has been part of the traditional holiday meal for all economic classes.[6]

Name

According to Adolfo Ernst, the word hallaca evolved from the indigenous Guarani language, stemming from the verb ayua or ayuar, meaning "to mix or blend". From there, the construction ayuaca (mixed things) devolved to ayaca and ultimately to hayaca or hallaca (using Spanish silent "h" when written). Another version presumes that the word comes from an aboriginal language of the West of the country, whose meaning is "wrapping" or "bojote".The earliest use of the word in the modern sense is in a 1781 document of Italian missionary linguist Filippo Salvatore Gilii.[citation needed]

Preparation

Filling of the hallacas before being wrapped in the banana leaves.

Hallaca filling is more elaborate than the standard tamale filling.[7] Ingredients differ from region to region and from family to family but may include a combination of beef, pork, bacon, lard, onion, sweet pepper, red pepper, scallion, garlic, salt, pepper, oregano, cumin and some type of cooking wine or vinegar. In the version from the Venezuelan Andes hallacas are made with guiso crudo which differ from other versions because the meat filling is not pre-cooked.[8] Some versions of the filling include leeks, Worcestershire sauce, mustard pickles, panela, or dark brown sugar.[9] The stew is simmered over low heat slowly for several hours.[6]

In Aruba and Curaçao, two islands just off the coast of Falcón state, Venezuela, it is called 'ayaca' or 'ayaka'. The ingredients are pork and chicken stew, or pork or chicken stew, capers, raisins, cashews, bellpepper, pickled baby onions, prunes, and olives. The dough is made from white cornmeal, and the ayaca leaves first spread with lard or oil. Cooked meat and other ingredients are then wrapped in ayaca leaves, tied with string and then boiled for about 2 hours. Flavors in the ayaca vary from family to family, and some add Madam Jeanette peppers (very hot).[citation needed]

In Puerto Rican cuisine the dish is called hayaca and used to be a popular part of the island's cuisine. Unlike the Venezuelan variety, hayaca from Puerto Rico is not made with corn but with cassava, milk, annatto, and banana leaf, and baked in traditional open-wood-fire. Because of the long and elaborate process and skills that takes to prepare, the hayaca is now rarely available but is still found, mostly in coastal, family-owned restaurants and other small establishments known as "kioscos" where there are still strong ties to native heritage and classic slow cooking skills.[citation needed]

The corn dough is similar to a standard arepas dough. Pork fat is melted down with annatto to add color. Corn flour is kneaded together with broth and some soft butter and the cooled pork fat mixture is incorporated to make a soft dough with a golden color. A large plantain leaf is greased with vegetable oil and the dough is flattened on the leaf to about a quarter inch thickness . The guiso filling is topped with a combination of onion, pepper, parsley, potatoes, raisins, almonds, chickpeas, capers, green olives, hard boiled eggs and bacon.[8][10][5] The leaf is tied and boiled at a low heat.[8]

Hallaca can be made in advance and frozen.[7]

Traditions

Traditional Christmas meal in Venezuela with pan de jamón and hallacas.

Hallaca is a staple of Venezuelan Christmas celebrations[11] Christmas meals in Venezuela would include hallacas, pastries, pan de jamón and chicken stew, but not all families have been able to afford them during food shortages in Venezuela.[12] In 2014, despite food shortages affecting the country, the Venezuelan government created a hallaca with a length of around 400 feet, a Guinness World Record.[13] In contrast to Venezuelan tradition, hallacas are popular year-round in Ecuador, and several variants exist across the country's different regions. Along with humitas, they are a staple of traditional Ecuadorian cuisine.[citation needed]

Families usually gather in the morning to prep the ingredients. Banana leaves brought in from the fields will have contaminants and need to be cleaned thoroughly before use.[14]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b Kijac, M.B. (2003). The South American Table: The Flavor and Soul of Authentic Home Cooking from Patagonia to Rio de Janeiro, with 450 Recipes. NYM Series. Harvard Common Press. p. 84. ISBN 978-1-55832-249-3. Retrieved 5 November 2016.
  2. ^ Albala, K. (2011). Food Cultures of the World Encyclopedia. Food Cultures of the World Encyclopedia. Greenwood. p. 1–PA102. ISBN 978-0-313-37626-9. Retrieved 5 November 2016.
  3. ^ Garth, Hanna 2013 Food and Identity in the Caribbean. London: Bloomsbury.
  4. ^ Cuza, Alejandro (15 November 2017). Cuban Spanish Dialectology: Variation, Contact, and Change. ISBN 9781626165113.
  5. ^ a b "RECIPE: Traditional Venezuelan hallacas". 9news.
  6. ^ a b "Three generations gather to carry on Venezuelan Christmas hallacas tradition in Naperville". Chicago Tribune. 23 December 2017.
  7. ^ a b Kijac, Maria Baez (2003). The South American Table: The Flavor and Soul of Authentic Home Cooking from Patagonia to Rio de Janeiro, With 450 Recipes. Harvard Common Press. p. 84. ISBN 9781558322493.
  8. ^ a b c "Venezuelan Andean Hallacas". Que Rica Vida. General Mills.
  9. ^ Guinn, Jeff (2012). Santa's North Pole Cookbook: Classic Christmas Recipes from Saint Nicholas. ISBN 9780399160646.
  10. ^ Tighe, Eileen (1966). Woman's Day Encyclopedia of Cookery ; Prepared and Edited by the Editors of Woman's Day, Volume 11. Fawcett Publications.
  11. ^ Schuetz, K. (2009). Venezuela. Exploring Countries. Bellwether Media. p. 23. ISBN 978-1-61211-587-0. Retrieved 5 November 2016.
  12. ^ "A homemade Christmas dish is the latest casualty of Venezuela's economic crisis". Miami Herald. 16 December 2017.
  13. ^ "Venezuelan cooks produce world's largest hallaca, traditional savory Christmas treat". Fox News.
  14. ^ "For this Venezuelan, Christmas isn't Christmas without hallaca".
  1. ^ Rosenblat, Ángel. (Venezuela Analysis, ???). hallaca.asp "hallaca". Retrieved 9 January 2005.
  2. ^ Castillo, Efrain. Revista Estampas (???) "Decanos de la Navidad" Retrieved 8 April 2012