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Life Goals: Bite Yu Finga! Innovating Belizean Cuisine
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Belize’s iconic dishes, stewed chicken. If you have ever visited or lived in Belize you have sampled this, which, when properly made, is savory and loaded with flavour, with pieces of perfectly tender chicken falling off the bone into a rich and delicious gravy. A note to my Belizean readers: you may not make stew chicken exactly like I do, perhaps you have a secret ingredient or a special step that you use in your own kitchen, but when it comes to this dish, that just makes it taste better and alla we da one!

Belizean popular cuisine centers around the Belizean Kriol classic one pot dish of rice and beans, preferably with some kind of protein accompanying it. Since the beans are often flavoured with a nice fat pig tail, you can probably already guess that the protein is unlikely to be soy-based. While Belize is increasingly vegetarian and vegan friendly, Belizean vegetarians and vegans remain a small minority. Fish and other seafood, beef, chicken, pork and even game animals such as deer (antelope in local parlance), wild pig (peccary or warrie) and gibnut (a large and tasty member of the rodent family affectionately nicknamed the royal rat for once having been served to the Queen of England) may appear on the side of a plate heaped high with rice and beans or stewed beans and rice. Ideally fried plantains and some type of salad (more a garnish than anything) perch on the margins of this loaded platter, and the whole thing is commonly doused by the hungry consumer with liberal quantities of home-made or store bought hot pepper sauce.

You will find some variation of this meal at most Belizean restaurants and in many (particularly Kriol and Garifuna) homes around lunch time, traditionally the biggest meal of the day. While the diverse nation that is Belize boasts a wide array of delicious foodstuffs, this meal is what most Belizeans think of when they talk about “Belizean food” and it is what they crave when they are far from home.

Although animal flesh is relegated to the side of the plate, that does not diminish its importance. While one can certainly eat rice and beans (or stew beans and rice, which is not the same thing) by themselves, most Belizeans strive to ensure that some type of animal accompanies them. Fish and seafood may be stewed, fried, baked, grilled. Land meats are usually stewed to allay toughness, providing a rich gravy to wet the accompanying rice and beans. Stewed Chicken (stew chicken in Belizean Kriol), is a particularly popular choice in restaurants. I got my recipe from a woman in Cayo District who made the best stew chicken I had ever tasted. In the coastal village of Placencia I learned another trick to add to the flavour of the dish.

The recipe I offer below is an amalgamation of techniques from across the country, and I encourage you to make your own changes as you see fit. No two people make stew chicken exactly the same way. In keeping with this tradition, I present the recipe below as it was given to me: with no exact measurements.

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Stew Chicken

The meat:

A whole chicken, cut into pieces, or conversely 4-5 chicken legs and thighs or breasts with rib meat, skin on.

(Do not under any circumstances try to make this with boneless skinless chicken breast. In fact, I strongly recommend using either a combination of white and dark meat, or dark meat alone, for the best flavour)

The vegetables:

onion (1 large or 2 small/medium)

sweet pepper (green) (1 large or 2 small/medium)

The seasonings:

garlic (2-4 cloves, to taste)

red recado (about 1 tablespoon, read more about recado here)

Soy sauce

Worcestershire sauce

cumin (ground)

thyme (dried)

oregano (dried or fresh)

salt

fresh ground black pepper

bayleaf or allspice leaf (optional)

white vinegar (1-2 tablespoons)

coconut oil (1-2 tablespoons)

1-2 tsp of sugar

Procedure:

1. Take the cut up chicken, place in a bowl and rub thoroughly with a mixture of about 2 tablespoons of vinegar and a piece of recado about the size of half an egg.

2. Add several tablespoons each of soy sauce and Worcestershire sauce and about a teaspoon each of cumin, and dried thyme, oregano, and black pepper. Don’t add salt yet.

3. Chop an onion or two and one large or two medium sweet peppers and chop up 3-5 cloves of garlic.

4. Heat the coconut oil in a large saucepan to medium high heat. Toss in the sugar. Add the chicken, skin side down, and brown, then turn and brown on the other side. Reserve the marinade from the chicken, this will be used later!

5. Add the onion, garlic and sweet peppers to the pot, turn heat down and saute until onion is transparent, then add the marinade liquid from the chicken bowl, along with a glass or two of water, enough to almost cover the chicken.

6. Let simmer for 40 minutes to an hour, taste for flavour and adjust seasonings as needed. You may need to add more soy sauce, Worcestershire sauce or herbs to your taste. Add salt to taste if needed.

7. Serve with rice and beans or stew beans and (coconut, always with coconut) rice, fried plantains and a little side salad (potato salad or coleslaw is classic) for a taste of one of Belize’s most popular lunches.