jueves, 28 de abril de 2016

Streedfood Experience in Bogotá

Arepas, empanadas, juices, among many other kind of streetfood, belong to the Colombians typical daily diet and are sold in little tiendas all over Colombia. We had a look in Bogotá’s old colonial centre to find some of these little tiendas and try some of Colombia`s food specialties.

If someone of you is interested in a streetfood Tour in Bogotá please don`t hesitate to get in contact with us. Please find below a short summary of our experiences gained in Colombia`s local cuisine:

First stop: Juices. In the shop “Frutería y Cafetería El Florero” we are welcomed by Misael and his family, who have been running the business for several decades. In the morning, his wife and his daughter visit the market to buy all fruits and groceries needed for the preparation of juices, among other local specialties. Therefore, they have to go there quiet early, in order to be back at time, when the first guests arrive at 7 a.m. We arrived there at 9 a.m. and Misael explained us a little bit about his family business. As the idea was to get an impression of the variety of fruits and specially juices, which are an obligatory element of each meal in Colombia, we got four different juices to try: Lulo, guanabana, passion fruit and star fruit.



After the delicious juices we head for our next station: empanadas vallunas, made by Martha León some tiendas further. Again, a family business, but a little bit larger. Martha León knows how to run the empanada business, how to get the perfect paste and the variety of tastes loved by Colombian people. She sells around 1000 to 1500 a day, taking into account only the shop in the colonial old town of Bogotá. She prepares several small empanadas for us, including all kinds of filling: meat, chicken, veggie, cheese, hawaiians, etc. We eat as much as we can and regret that we had breakfast before.


Even though our stomachs are full, we are still curious to get further impressions of Colombian food. The next stop leads us to Javier, the owner of a small shop specialized in the production of artisanal chocolate. The consumption of hot chocolate in Colombia, especially in Bogotá, is quite high, but the chocolate consumed is often produced industrially, containing high amounts of sugar and low quantity of cacao. Javier explains us about the whole preparation of process, starting with the cacao plants, the roasting and the preparation of the hot chocolate. We get the opportunity to try a real and delicious hand-made hot chocolate with no sugar and a high percentage of cacao content.

The hot chocolate is not the only famous drink in Bogotá. Another ancestral drink consumed already by the Muiscas, a precolombian culture, was the chicha, a drink produced by the fermentation of corn. In the 60’s German immigrants introduced as a new alcoholic beverage German beer, which became more and more important reducing vastly the consumption of the traditional chicha. The reputation of chicha decreased and even got forbidden during a period. A famous slogan of these times “Chicha embrutece” (“Chicha mades dump” in english) promoted to reduce the popularity of chicha. Nowadays, chicha is consumed again by locals and tourist, especially in the Bogota sector of La Candelaria and Perseverancia, where many little chicha factories can be found. The story was really interesting, even though the chicha itself had an acquired taste.


The tour is finalized in a little market, where the vast variety of fruits produced in Colombia can be admired and tasted. Even for those living for years in Colombia, there are still exotic fruits to be discovered.


With full stomachs and new impressions we go back to our office. This tour showed us once more, that there are still many places and things to be discovered in Bogotá’s old colonial centre.

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