Cuban Cuisine: Complex Yet Comforting

John Reed

February 19, 2020

3 Min Read
Cuban Cuisine: Complex Yet Comforting

In many ways, Cuban cuisine has been misunderstood and somewhat marginalized down to black beans, rice, plantains and the now ubiquitous “Cuban” sandwich. It’s true that the cuisine has deep roots in these staples, but it’s more evolved and exciting than we generally get to experience.

A brief history

Cuban cuisine has played a major role in what pioneering chefs of the early 90s dubbed as South Florida’s “Floribbean” cuisine. Floribbean cuisine, much like the state of Florida itself, is a fusion of various cultures’ influences including Caribbean, Hispanic and Asian.

For many years, small cafes and family restaurants served Cuban food in Miami’s Little Havana, Little River and Hialeah neighborhoods. What made it appealing was the approachability of the dishes, which featured many different comforting flavors.

shutterstock_274310855.jpg

Cuban food is not driven by strong chilis, hard-to-source ingredients or highly seasoned. It is much more well balanced than that. The largest Island in the Caribbean, Cuba was populated by natives, Africans, Chinese and Western Europeans. These cultures help define the food’s African creole recipes, Spanish cuisine and indigenous ingredients.

Catersource 2020, co-located with The Special Event, is coming up soon! Click here for more information or to register!

Cooking styles

Cuban cooking techniques are rather simple and involve simmering, stewing and deep-frying. The famous Cuban bread was left to the local baker to master as the climate lent itself to the use of lard--not butter--as the base fat. Cuban bread is still considered a daily purchase.

There are few fundamental preparations and seasonings that are fundamental to the cuisine. These items tend to drive the foundational flavor of many dishes:

  • Sofrito: A seasoning paste made of tomato, onions, pepper, cumin and garlic

  • Recaito: Similar to sofrito, but made with green herbs such as cilantro and culantro

  • Mojo: A basic marinade of sour orange juice, garlic and cumin. It can also be as a condiment

  • Adobo: A commercial seasoning based on salt, cumin and other dried herbs

These are all used in combination to create flavor. I have some of these recipes listed on our website.

Plantains

There are two ingredients found in Cuban cuisine that are in need of clarification in preparation and complexity. The first is the Plantain.

We see fried plantains on catering menus all the time, and there is no consistency in traditional preparations. Plantains, like bananas, ripen off the tree and change from starchy to sweet and soft. There are several versions of fried plantains prepared from various stages of ripeness.

From Un-ripened Green Plantains

Mariquitas: Thinly shaved and deep long fried strips served as a snack with salt and mojo

Tostones: Double fried smashed disks with a fluffy interior and crisp skin

From Blackened Fully Ripened Plantains

Platanos Maduros: Thick-cut plantains served as an entrée side dish

Plantains that are in between ripeness are really never served.

The Cuban sandwich

The second ingredient worth discussion is the Cuban sandwich, created in Miami or Tampa depending on your views on Genoa Salami. There are many versions of the Cuban sandwich.

The typical approach to the Cuban sandwich on a menu tends to be a combination of roast pork, ham, cheese, pickle mustard and mayo. The key to this is the pork, which is traditionally a mojo marinated pork shoulder or from a whole roasted lechon (whole pig). The other is Cuban bread that is as built as a sandwich and pressed on a tabletop plancha (sandwich press).

There are plenty more variations of the pressed Cuban sandwich that will allow you to expand your offerings and bring some fun stations and small bites to your next event. Be sure to see the list of Cuban sandwiches and traditional dishes on our website.

About the Author

John Reed

John Reed is a professional chef with over 30 years’ experience. He is the owner of Customized Culinary Solutions, a culinary consulting firm located in the Chicago Northshore area. He works with restaurant, catering, and foodservice companies to provide the highest quality food possible. His contributions include menu and recipe development, emerging concept development, and transition management for companies introducing culinary and production software programs. His company specializes as an on-demand culinary department supporting out-sourced culinary project management.

An active member of the ACF, he has earned certifications as a Certified Executive Chef, Certified Culinary Administrator, and American Academy of Chefs. He recently received his Certified Cicerone® accreditation one of only 2100 such certifications globally; John won the ACF National Chef Professionalism Award in 2010. He has competed many times in culinary competitions around the country. As part of the ACF Team USA Regional Culinary Team he competed at the International Culinary Olympics in October 2012.  He also volunteered as an operations manager for the ACF US Culinary Olympic Team that represents the US in all major competitions and recognized in international culinary competitions. He was the WCPC Chef of the Year in 2007 and Member of the Year 2010.  He was just recently inducted into the Disciples d’ Escoffier International.

Presently he serves as Chairmen of the Board for the Chefs and Culinary Professionals of Chicagoland. He is also a member of the Research Chefs Association, Foodservice Consultants Society International and NACE. He also participates in Industry Advisory Boards and Focus Groups. 

John also has experience as a culinary educator at Johnson & Wales University in North Miami, Florida and College of DuPage in Glen Ellyn, Illinois. He also holds degree in Culinary Arts from Johnson and Wales University and a bachelor’s degree in Hotel, Restaurant and Travel Administration from the University of Massachusetts, Amherst.

John has spent time with the Navy’s Adopt-a-Ship Program supporting the culinary divisions on board both the USS Stethem (DDG-63) and USS Fitzgerald (DDG-62) of the coast of Japan while both ships were in active forward deployment.

Subscribe and receive the latest catering news, recipes, tips, essential content.
Yes, it's completely free