Course | Main course |
---|---|
Place of origin | Unknown, possibly Spain |
Serving temperature | Hot |
Main ingredients | Rice, fried egg, tomato sauce |
Arroz a la cubana (Spanish pronunciation: [aˈroθ a la kuˈβana]) ("Cuban-style rice") or arroz cubano is a rice dish popular in Spain, the Philippines, and parts of Latin America. Its defining ingredients are rice and a fried egg. A fried banana ( plantain or other cooking bananas) and tomato sauce ( sofrito) are so frequently used that they are often considered defining ingredients too. [1] [2]
Despite the name, the dish does not exist in Cuban cuisine and its origins are not definitively known. [3] [4] It may possibly originate from a Spanish misinterpretation of common Cuban meals of eating rice with stews and a fried egg when Cuba was still a Spanish colony. [3] [5]
In Spain, a typical dish of arroz a la cubana consists of a serving of white rice with tomato sauce ( sofrito) and a fried egg. While the most traditional recipe includes a fried plantain (plátano), [6] it is also common to find the recipe using sausages and bacon. [5]
In the Philippines, arroz a la cubana has been eaten in the Philippines since Spanish colonial times. [6] Like in other versions, it comes with white rice, fried egg, and some ripe fried cardava or saba banana, sliced length-wise. [7] [2] [8]
It differs significantly from the Spanish and Latin American versions in that instead of a sofrito, it always includes ground meat (giniling, usually beef) in tomato sauce. [7] This component is typically cooked picadillo-style, with minced potatoes, carrots, raisins, peas, onions, garlic, and other ingredients in a tomato-based sauce seasoned with patis (fish sauce), soy sauce, and sometimes chilis. [8] [9] [2] [10]
A regional variant of arroz a la cubana is arroz de Calamba from Calamba, Laguna. It differs in that it is served with strips of smoked fish ( tinapa). [11]
In Peru, it is common for the dish to consist of white rice, fried plantain, a fried hot-dog wiener, and a fried egg over the white rice. [12]
Course | Main course |
---|---|
Place of origin | Unknown, possibly Spain |
Serving temperature | Hot |
Main ingredients | Rice, fried egg, tomato sauce |
Arroz a la cubana (Spanish pronunciation: [aˈroθ a la kuˈβana]) ("Cuban-style rice") or arroz cubano is a rice dish popular in Spain, the Philippines, and parts of Latin America. Its defining ingredients are rice and a fried egg. A fried banana ( plantain or other cooking bananas) and tomato sauce ( sofrito) are so frequently used that they are often considered defining ingredients too. [1] [2]
Despite the name, the dish does not exist in Cuban cuisine and its origins are not definitively known. [3] [4] It may possibly originate from a Spanish misinterpretation of common Cuban meals of eating rice with stews and a fried egg when Cuba was still a Spanish colony. [3] [5]
In Spain, a typical dish of arroz a la cubana consists of a serving of white rice with tomato sauce ( sofrito) and a fried egg. While the most traditional recipe includes a fried plantain (plátano), [6] it is also common to find the recipe using sausages and bacon. [5]
In the Philippines, arroz a la cubana has been eaten in the Philippines since Spanish colonial times. [6] Like in other versions, it comes with white rice, fried egg, and some ripe fried cardava or saba banana, sliced length-wise. [7] [2] [8]
It differs significantly from the Spanish and Latin American versions in that instead of a sofrito, it always includes ground meat (giniling, usually beef) in tomato sauce. [7] This component is typically cooked picadillo-style, with minced potatoes, carrots, raisins, peas, onions, garlic, and other ingredients in a tomato-based sauce seasoned with patis (fish sauce), soy sauce, and sometimes chilis. [8] [9] [2] [10]
A regional variant of arroz a la cubana is arroz de Calamba from Calamba, Laguna. It differs in that it is served with strips of smoked fish ( tinapa). [11]
In Peru, it is common for the dish to consist of white rice, fried plantain, a fried hot-dog wiener, and a fried egg over the white rice. [12]