Arepa
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
An arepa is a dish made of ground corn dough or precooked corn flour popular in both
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Characteristics
The arepa is a flat round, unleavened patty made of cornmeal which can be grilled, baked, or fried.
The characteristics of the arepa vary from region to region: It may vary by color, flavor, size, thickness,
garnishment, and also the food it may be stuffed with. Arepa is a native sort of bread made of ground corn,
water, and salt which is fried into a pancake-like bread. It is either topped or filled with meat, eggs, tomatoes,
salad, cheese, shrimp, or fish.
Making arepas
There are two ways to prepare the dough. The traditional, labor-intensive method requires the maize grains to be
soaked, then peeled and ground in a large mortar known as a pilón. The pounding removes the pericarp and the
seed germ, as only the cotyledons of the maize seed are used to make the dough. The resulting mixture,
known as mortared maize, or maíz pilado, was normally sold as dry grain to be boiled and ground into dough.
The most popular method today is to buy pre-cooked arepa cornmeal. The flour is mixed with water and salt,
and occasionally oil, butter, eggs, and/or milk. After being kneaded and formed into patties, the dough is fried,
grilled, or baked. This production of corn is unusual for not using thenixtamalization, or alkali cooking process,
to remove the pericarp of the corn kernels. Arepa flour is lower in nutritive value than nixtamal, with its protein
value reduced by half.[citation needed]
value reduced by half.[citation needed]
Arepa flour
Pre-made arepa flour is specially prepared for making arepas and other maize dough-based dishes such as
hallacas, bollos, tamales, empanadas, and chicha. The most popular brand names of corn flour are Harina PAN
in Venezuela and Areparina in Colombia. Pre-made arepa flour is usually made from white corn, but there are
yellow corn varieties available. Pre-made arepa flour was first created and produced by Empresas Polar, who
owns the PAN brand and is the primary distributor of this flour in the country.
Electric arepa makers
, similar to a waffle iron, which cook arepas using two hot metallic surfaces clamped with the raw dough insideIn Venezuela, various kitchen appliance companies sell appliances like the Tostyarepa and Miallegro's MiArepa
. In Venezuela, the arepa is traditionally grilled on abudare, which is a flat, originally non-metallic surface which
may or may not have a handle. Arepas cooked this way are called tostadas. Nowadays, it is common to follow
the grilling process that forms a crust, known as a concha, within twenty to twenty five minutes of cooking at high
heat in an oven. Electric arepa makers such as the Tostyarepa and MiArepa reduce cooking time from fifteen to
twenty five minutes per side to seven minutes or less.
Electric arepa makers are not popular in Colombia, with most households choosing to prepare them traditionally.
History
Andes of Venezuela. Other Amerindian tribes in the region, such as the Arawaks and the Caribs, widely The predecessor of the arepa was a staple of the Timoto-cuicas, an Amerindian group that lived in the northern
Spanish, the food that would become the arepa was diffused into the rest of the region, known then as
La Gran Colombia (Colombia, Venezuela, Ecuador, Panama).
Both Colombians and Venezuelans view the arepa as a traditional national food. The arepa has a long
tradition in both countries, with local recipes that are delicious and varied.
Venezuelan arepas
In Eastern Venezuela, the most common variety of arepa is usually about 3 to 8 inches (200 mm) in
diameter and 3/4 inches thick. Larger arepas can be found, made with either white or yellow corn. In
the western Andes, arepas are flatter, and are typically quarter of an inch or less in thickness and 3 to 4 inches
(100 mm) in diameter. An arepa can be eaten with a filling or with a topping. A filled arepa is called an
arepa rellena or a Venezuelan tostada, although the latter term is not commonly used today. Also, there are
plenty of sauces to season the arepas while eating them, such as Guasacaca and Picante (Hot Sauce).
Venezuelans prepare arepas depending on personal taste or preference and the region in which they are made.
Venezuelan varieties include:
- Traditional corn (Maize) arepa
- Corn flour arepa (Arepa blanca or Viuda)
- Wheat flour arepa (Preñaditas in Venezuelan slang)
- Sweet arepa (Arepa dulce)
- Cheese arepa (Arepa de queso)
- Coconut arepa (Arepa de coco)
- Andean arepa (Arepa andina)
- Manioc arepa (Arepa de yuca)
- Reina Pepeada - filled with avocado, chicken, and mayonnaise
- Baked arepas (Arepas horneadas)
- Fried arepas (Arepa frita)
- Arepa pelúa - with yellow cheese and pulled beef
- Arepa con queso guayanés - with soft Guayanés cheese, similar to mozzarella
- Arepa con queso de mano - with firm white cheese from eastern Venezuela
- Arepa catira - with yellow cheese and shredded chicken
- Arepa de chicharrón - with crisped pork skin
- Arepa de dominó - white cheese and black beans
- Arepa de Perico - made with perico, a Caribbean type of scrambled eggs
- Arepa viuda ("widow" arepa) - an empty arepa usually eaten with soup
- Arepa Rumbera("Party" arepa)- with pork meat
- Arepa Llanera - with cuts of beef (Parrilla or BBQ), tomato slices, avocado slices and fresh white cheese
- Arepa con cazón - with school shark
Specialized Areperas can be found across Venezuela serving a wide array of fillings.
Colombian arepas
In Colombia, the arepa has deep roots in the colonial farms and the cuisine of the indigenous people. While
its preparation was once a tedious process of processing and cooking raw corn, today arepas are usually
. bought pre-made or made from "instant" (pre-cooked) flours.
Arepas are usually eaten for breakfast or as an afternoon snack. Common toppings include butter, cheese,
- Egg arepa (arepa de huevo or, colloquially, arepa 'e huevo) - this variety originated from the Caribbean coast
- but is popular in most major cities. This arepa is deep-fried with a single raw egg inside that is cooked by
- the frying process. Egg arepas are made with yellow corn dough and fried in the same manner as
- Colombian empanadas, and are often sold alongside other traditional Colombian foodstuffs at food stands.
- One variety of egg arepa has shredded beef added as well. The egg arepa was most likely created by
- African slaves near Cartagena.[citation needed]
- Cheese arepa (arepa de queso, arepa de quesillo) - the arepa is either made with cheese mixed into the
- ingredients or filled with grated cheese before it is cooked (grilled or fried, in this case).
- Arepa Boyacense - these arepas come from the department of Boyacá. They are very hard and dense, and
- are typically about three to four inches across and filled with a sweet cheese.
- Arepa Valluna - the variety unique to Cali and the rest of the Cauca valley. It is made only with cornmeal,
- water and salt, and it is buttered before eating, much like toast.
- Arepa de choclo (or chocolo) - made with sweet corn and farmer's white cheese.
- Arepa antioqueña - small, spherical arepas without salt served to accompany soups, especially mondongo.
- Very common in the department of Antioquia.
- Arepa Paisa - Very large and flat arepa made of white maize without salt but accompanied with meat or butter on top.
- Very common in the coffee-producing region, often served with hogao.
- Arepa de arroz - This is made with cooked, mashed rice instead of corn dough.
- Arepa santanderiana - This arepa originates from the area around Bucaramanga. It is also called Arepa de maiz pelado.
- It is made with yellow corn and has a distinct flavor due to the pork fat added during the preparation. It is usually dry but soft.
- Baked arepa - variously called arepa de maiz or arepa de queso at bakeries. Bakeries in Bogotá rarely sell the typical fried or grilled arepas,
- but instead sell a large, baked version of the arepa, made with yellow corn flour and often with a single cube of cheese on top. It has a similar taste and texture to a North American corn muffin.
with hot chocolate.In the western part of Colombia, especially around Bogotá, Cali and Medellín, a traditional breakfast includes an arepa
Companies such as "Don Maíz" have started to market new, less traditional varieties of arepas in Colombian grocery
stores that are nonetheless growing in popularity. These include cassava-flavored arepas (based on the more traditional
pan de yuca) and "whole-grain" arepas made of brown rice, wheat germ and sesame seeds.
Similar dishes
and when fried, the layers expand and the arepuela inflates, similar to miniature tortillas or pancakes. This is very
common in the interior of Colombia. In the north, bollos are popular for breakfast, which are made with the same
dough as an arepa, but boiled rather than fried which gives them a texture similar to matzoh balls or Czech bread dumplings.
the "pancake arepa" which is made with baking powder, and the "big flat arepa" which is made without baking powder.
These big flat arepas are, in size, not unlike the big tortillas that you find in Guanacaste (Northern Costa Rica)
, (i.e. some twelve inches in diameter) and are made of white flour and are sugary. Once perfectly cooked they
should resemble a "giraffe skin", or a "jaguar skin" (i.e., white/yellowish with brown spots).
The dough is then cut up into small rolls and is wrapped with a banana leaf for about 35 minutes.
Once done the arepas are then flattened using a rolling pin and then finally fried. Puerto Rican style
arepas are usually stuffed with fish that has been stewed in coconut milk. Cheese arepas are also very
popular but use a different recipe. Cheddar cheese or queso para freir (a type of Puerto Rican white frying cheese)
is mixed with cornmeal or rice flour, milk, eggs, wheat flour, sugar, and butter. The mix is then refrigerate for up to
4 hours and then fried.
is made out of nixtamal. It is also filled before it is cooked, usually some pork, white cheese or black beans.
.There are now other sorts of "pupusas" made out of rice dough, particularly in the town called Olocuilta in
the department of La Paz. There are also some newer versions of the dish based on plantain dough.
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