Peru
SEASONINGS
Peruvian seasoning and spice combinations are quite distinctive, with several key elements that make them unique:
AJÍ PEPPERS are the most defining element – particularly ají amarillo — yellow pepper, ají panca — dark red, smoky pepper, ají rocoto — spicy red pepper, and ají limo — very hot pepper. These give Peruvian food its characteristic heat and depth that’s different from other Latin American cuisines. While some dishes can be spicy, Peruvian food generally has a balance of flavors, including sweet, sour, salty, and spicy.
Unique herb varieties from coasts, mountains, jungles:
HUACATAY – black mint, an Andean herb that’s neither quite like mint nor basil, but has its own complex, slightly anise-like quality.
EPAZOTE – Used in the Andes for soups and stews
MUÑA – Andean mint used for altitude sickness and cooking
CHINCO – a native herb essential for pachamanca preparation, it has aromatic, anise-like flavor
Peruvian cuisine has less emphasis on dry spice blends compared to other Latin American cuisines and a strong focus on fresh paste-based seasonings rather than dried spices, extensive use of lime in coastal cuisine, and integration of fermented ingredients like chicha de jora — corn beer, or pisco — grape brandy, in marinades and sauces. Many of these seasonings, especially the native peppers and herbs, are difficult to substitute.
Interestingly, garlic and onions, while not native to Peru, are used in such large quantities that they’ve become fundamental to the cuisine’s flavor profile. They often form the base of dishes along with ají peppers.
Cumin, oregano, and black pepper were introduced by Europeans but are now used in distinctly Peruvian ways – in marinades for anticuchos and in meat dishes. These spices are used more subtly than in other Latin American cuisines.
Unique seasoning combinations emerged from cultural fusion. For instance, the use of soy sauce was introduced by Chinese immigrants and created new flavor profiles.
SAUCES
LECHE DE TIGRE – Though technically the marinade for ceviche, it’s often served as a sauce or even drunk on its own. Contains lime juice, fish juice, chilies, garlic, cilantro, and other seasonings.
HUANCAÍNA SAUCE – A creamy, spicy yellow sauce made with ají amarillo, queso fresco — fresh cheese, milk, saltine crackers, and garlic. It’s famous as the sauce for Papa a la Huancaína but is used widely.
OCOPA SAUCE – A sauce from Arequipa similar to huancaína but distinctly flavored with huacatay — black mint, and ground peanuts, often including evaporated milk and crackers.
AJÍ VERDE – A fresh, spicy green sauce made with cilantro, jalapeños or ají amarillo, lime juice, and garlic. It’s commonly served as a table condiment and used particularly with grilled meats.
SALSA CRIOLLA – A fresh sauce/relish made with sliced red onions, lime juice, chilies, and cilantro. It’s served with many dishes, particularly grilled meats and anticuchos.
CHALACA – A fresh condiment of diced onions, chilies, corn, and lime juice.
Mexico
SEASONINGS
The chile pepper is the cornerstone of Mexican seasoning – fresh, cooked, dried, smoked, ground with salt and lime. Mexicans use cilantro, cumin, cinnamon, peppercorn, cloves, garlic, and onion extensively. Also, some native, often regional, ingredients:
- Epazote, a strong and earthy herb for beans and quesadillas
- Mexican oregano with more citrus and licorice notes than the regular;
- Papalo, an exotic herb which tastes somewhere between arugula, cilantro, and rue;
- Achiote/annatto, peppery spice, and reddish-brown coloring agent.
Some traditional spice blends include:
TAJIN – dehydrated lime, salt, dried ground chilies – used in fruits, vegetables, and snacks for a spicy and tangy kick. Used to sprinkle fruits, veggies, toppings for popcorn, nuts, chips, and aguas frescas.
MOLE SPICE BLEND – dried chilies, cinnamon, cloves, black pepper, cumin, allspice, cacao.
BARBACOA SEASONING – Used in traditional barbacoa, a mixture of guajillo chiles, cumin, cloves, black pepper, and bay leaves is common, sometimes blended with vinegar and other spices to marinate lamb or goat.
SAUCES
Mexican cooking embraces the concept of recado or seasoning pastes, where spices and chilies are ground together to create complex flavor bases.
MOLE SAUCES is a complex category of thick, rich sauces made of 20-30 ingredients and can take days to prepare properly. Key components are chiles, nuts or seeds like almonds, pumpkin seeds, peanuts, spices like cinnamon, cloves, cumin, anise, and something sweet, like chocolate, fruit, and sugar. The main ones are sweet and spicy, chocolaty mole poblano, complex and bitter mole negro, lighter and fresher green mole verde, herby, and tangy yellow mole amarillo. Moles are considered a Mexican dish in sauce form, commonly served over meats, with eggs or enchiladas.
GUACAMOLE – both a sauce and a dish made with mashed avocados, lime juice, cilantro, onions, tomatoes, and chilies.
ADOBO is a marinade-style sauce made with dried chiles, vinegar, garlic, paprika, tomatoes, onion, cumin, Mexican oregano, black pepper, cinnamon, and cloves. Adobada is Spanish is ‘marinated’, and it can refer to different types of meat as well as al pastor (spit roast) marinade.
SALSA ROJA is a classic red table sauce of red tomatoes and chiles, onion, and garlic that can be served raw, like pico de gallo, or roasted. Used in many dishes and as a table condiment, represents essential heat in Mexican cuisine.
SALSA VERDE – is a tomatillo, serrano or jalapeño, cilantro, onion, and lime juice sauce, fundamental to everyday cooking, used both raw and cooked for tacos, enchiladas, and as a table sauce.
PIPIÁN SAUCE – made from ground pumpkin seeds, tomatillos, and chilies such as poblano, serrano and jalapeño. Similar to mole, but lighter, served with carnitas, as an enchilada sauce, with roasted poultry.
ACHIOTE PASTE / RECADO ROJO – achiote/ annatto seeds, oregano, cumin, black pepper, garlic, cloves, cinnamon. Frequently used in Yucatan cuisine to marinate meats and fish, and flavor rice dishes.