Eating out
Ecuador's restaurants
range from those
charging western prices
for top-class
international cuisine to
the grimiest roadside
eatery serving chicken,
rice and little else
besides. The majority of
restaurants ,
however, are clean but
modest, and offer decent
food at low prices. Most
of them simply call
themselves
restaurantes , but
others you might
encounter are
cevicherías (for
ceviche ),
asaderos (usually
roast chicken),
pizzerías (pizzas),
marisquerías (seafood),
picanterías (cheap
snacks and sometimes
spicy food),
parrilladas (grillhouses)
and
paradores (roadside
stophouses). The Chinese
restaurant, or
chifa
, is to Ecuador as the
curry house is to
Britain; chifas are
found in just about
every town in the
country, dishing out
tasty, inexpensive food
to a loyal local
following. The typical
chifa dishes are
chaulafán (fried
rice) and
tallarines
(noodles), both mixed
with meat and vegetables
and served in large
helpings.
Vegetarians
are likely to become
well-acquainted with
chifas for their
tallarines con verduras
(noodles and veg), one
of the few hot veggie
meals available across
the country. There's no
shortage of vegetarian
food in the main tourist
centres, but away from
those, the cry of "
soy vegeteriano " ("
vegeteriana " for
a woman), "I'm a
vegetarian", will
sometimes be met with
offers of fish or even
chicken, and you'll have
to discuss other
possibilities with the
waiter; they should be
able to get something
together for you even if
it's just egg, chips and
rice - and even the
blandest food can be
enlivened by ají
, the chilli sauce found
on most restaurant
dining tables. It's one
of the few spicy-hot
elements of Ecuadorian
cooking, but the degree
of spiciness depends on
the establishment.
Many restaurants
open early in the
morning and serve
breakfast (
desayuno ) in either
the continental
or americano
varieties, the former
being bread ( pan
), butter (
mantequilla ) and
jam ( mermelada
), accompanied by coffee
( café ) and
juice ( jugo );
add huevos revueltos
or fritos (scrambled
or fried eggs) to this
and you've got an
americano . In the
Oriente, you'll come
across the petrolero
(oil man), which is all
this plus a chunk of
meat or a similar manly
accessory. Fruit salad,
granola and yogurt also
make appearances on
breakfast tables in
tourist centres.
Eating out can cost
less than $1.50 per head
if you stick to set
menus; at lunch
this is called
almuerzo and at
dinner merienda
, which consist of two
or three courses and a
drink. À la carte and
individual main
courses ( platos
fuertes ) dishes are
typically $2-4 - you're
probably in a smart
place if it's more than
$5. A real blowout in a
nice restaurant
shouldn't go much over
$15 a head. Bear in mind
that the better places
will add 12 percent
tax (IVA) and 10
percent service to your
bill.
Comidas típicas
In the highlands
, a typical meal might
start off with a
locro , a delicious
soup of potato,
cheese and corn with
half an avocado tossed
in for good measure.
This is great for
vegetarians, who'll want
to steer well clear of
its relative,
yaguarlocro , which
swaps the avocado for a
sausage of sheep's blood,
tripe and giblets. Other
soups might be caldo
de patas , cattle
hoof soup; caldo de
gallina , chicken
soup; or even caldo
de manguera , which
literally means "hose
pipe soup", a polite
name for bull's penis
soup. A number of
different grains, such
as morocho ,
similar to rice, and
quinoa , a small
circular grain, are also
thrown into soups, along
with whatever meat and
vegetables are available.
Other possible
starters , or snacks
in their own right,
include empanadas
, corn pasties filled
with vegetables, cheese
or meat.
For a main course
you might go for
llapingachos ,
cheesy potato cakes -
cheese, corn and
potatoes are big in the
highlands - often served
with chorizo (sausage),
lomo (steak) or
pollo (chicken)
and fried eggs. The
famous cuy ,
guinea pig roasted whole,
has remained for
centuries a speciality
of the indigenous
highlanders, and is
rather good, if a bit
expensive. Another
traditional dish is
seco de chivo , a
stew not made of goat as
the name suggests, but
mutton. The
unappetizing-looking
guatita , usually
tripe smothered in
peanut sauce, is
actually much better
than it sounds.
Mote , a hard
corn that is peeled with
calcium carbonate
solution, and then
boiled in salt water, is
frequently served as
accompaniment to main
courses, particularly
fritada , seasoned
pork deep-fried in lard,
and hornado ,
pork slow-roasted in the
oven. Motepillo
is a Cuenca speciality,
in which the mote is
mixed with eggs to make
corn-filled scrambled
eggs. Another common
side dish is tostado
, toasted maize, or
canguil , popcorn
that often comes with
soups and ceviches
.
If you still have
space left then there's
morocho de leche
, similar to rice
pudding flavoured with
cinnamon and often
served cold;
quesadillas , baked
cheese doughballs
brushed with sweet
syrup; or humitas
, ground corn mixed with
cheese, sugar, butter
and vanilla, wrapped in
banana leaves and
steamed. Higos con
queso , figs with
cheese, is another
common highland dessert.
Coastal
delicacies,
unsurprisingly, centre
on seafood . The
classic ceviche
is prepared by
marinating raw seafood
in lime juice and
chilli, and serving with
raw onion. It can be
dangerous to eat
uncooked seafood, so
it's worth knowing that
shrimps ( camarones
) and king prawns (
langostinos ) are
usually boiled for ten
minutes before they're
marinated. If a
cevichería (
ceviche restaurant)
looks unhygienic, you
should probably give it
a miss. On the north
coast, encocados
are fantastic fish
dishes with a Caribbean
flavour, cooked in a
sauce of coconut milk,
tomato and garlic and
often served with a huge
mound of rice. Bananas
and plantain often
replace the potato,
appearing in many
different forms on the
side of your plate.
Patacones are
thick-cut plantains
fried up in oil and
served with plenty of
salt, while chifles
are thinly cut plantains
cooked the same way.
Bolón de verde is a
rather stodgy ball of
mashed baked plantain,
cheese and coriander
traditionally served as
a snack with coffee.
The Oriente ,
being originally
composed of many
disparate indigenous
groups, has rather less
well-defined
specialities, but you
can count on yuca
(a manioc similar to yam)
making an appearance,
alongside rice, bananas,
and fish (including the
scrawny piranha) caught
in the rivers. As a
guest of a forest
community, you may eat
game such as wild pig or
guanta , a large
rodent not that
different to cuy
.
Drinks
Bottled fizzy drinks
( colas or
gaseosas ) can be
obtained all over
Ecuador, particularly
Coca-Cola, Sprite and
Fanta. Note that if you
want to take your Coke
away with you, you'll
have to pay a deposit on
the glass bottle; a more
common solution is to
get it put en bolsa
, in a small plastic bag
with a straw. Recyclable
plastic bottles and cans
are becoming more common,
but they are more
expensive. Bottled
mineral water is
also widespread, but
restaurants commonly
only stock the sparkling
variety ( con gas
) named Güitig - if you
want still water (
sin gas ), you'll
find it in most
groceries and
supermarkets.
Ecuador has more
types of fruit than you
can imagine, certainly
far more than there are
English names for, and
just about all of them
are made into
mouthwatering juices
( jugos ). The
most common fruit juices
are made from
maracuyá (passion
fruit), tomate de
arbol (more fruity
than a tomato, but not
to everyone's taste),
naranjilla (sweet
and tart at the same
time), piña (pineapple),
naranja (orange),
guanábana (a very
sweet white fruit), and
mora (blackberry),
but there are many
others. Juices can come
pure ( puro ) or
mixed with water - make
sure it's purified water.
When they're mixed with
milk they're called
batidos .
Considering that
Ecuador is a major
coffee producing
country, it's a shame
there's not more of the
real stuff about. Most
cafés and restaurants
will have a jar of
Nescafé on the table,
though a few places have
esencia de café ,
a kind of liquid coffee
distillate. You'll get a
cup of hot milk if you
ask for café con
leche , and hot
water for black coffee
if you specify café
negro . There's
often a pot of chocolate
powder lying around as
well, for hot
chocolate or for
mixing the two together
for mocha. Tea (
té ) is served
without milk and usually
with a slice of lemon.
Asking for té con
leche is likely to
get you a cup of hot
milk and a teabag. For
just a dash of milk,
it's best not to say
anything until your (milkless)
tea arrives, and then
ask for a little milk.
Herbal teas (
aromáticas ) come in
a variety of flavours,
some of which are
familiar, while others
are made from native
plants.
Beer
essentially comes in two
forms. Pilsener is the
people's beer, weak and
light and in big
bottles, while Club is a
bit stronger, a bit more
expensive and comes in
small bottles or cans.
Foreign brands are
available in some city
bars, but you'll have to
pay for the privilege.
Ecuadorian wine
is a bit rough around
the edges and isn't that
common, but you'll find
good Chilean and
Argentinian vintages in
the smarter restaurants
for less than you'd pay
at home.
The local tipple,
especially in the
sierra, is chicha
, a fermented corn drink
of which there are many
varieties. Buckets -
literally - of the stuff
do the rounds at all
highland fiestas. In the
Oriente, the chicha
is made from yuca
, which is chewed up,
spat in a pot and
allowed to ferment.
Aguardiente (also
called caña or
punta ) is a
sugarcane spirit
, sharper than rum (
ron ), that will
take off the roof of
your mouth. In fiestas
they might mix it with
fruit juices, or in the
sierra drink it as
canelazo , adding
sugar, cinnamon (
canela ) and hot
water to make a
traditional highland
warmer. On the coast it
stars in many cocktails,
the most ubiquitous
being caipiriña ,
in which it (or rum) is
combined with lime
juice, sugar and ice.