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Welcome to our new recipe column, ¡A comer!. Each month, we will share a new recipe that celebrates Latine cuisine and foodways.
Food is a delicious form of culture and a phenomenal way to pass on knowledge and tradition. It can even serve as a means of exploring personal identity and the state of the world. In this monthly column, we will mix in some historic context, little-known facts or breaking news that connects what we eat with who we are, where we have been or where we are headed.
Today, we begin with this scrumptious recipe starring a beloved everyday ingredient: “el plátano,” also known as the plantain.
Do you have a favorite Latine dish or family recipe? We’d love to get your suggestions or to feature your recipe on Hola Cultura. Send us an email, contact@holacultura.com.

Context: Plátano is an immigrant.
Both the banana and its heartier relative, the plantain, are everyday staples of today’s Latin American cuisine. But according to the chronicles of Gonzalo Fernández de Oviedo — a Spanish soldier and botanist who recorded Spain’s colonization of the Caribbean — these humble ingredients only reached this side of the globe during colonial times. Historians trace both the banana, “plátano normal,” and the plantain, “plátano macho,” to the South Pacific, where they were first cultivated centuries before the birth of Christ.
Since putting down roots in the Americas in the 1500s, plantains have found their way into every meal of the day in many countries, from Dominican mangú, a mashed plantain dish usually served for breakfast, to main courses and desserts. It is often a feature of savory soups like aguají, a Dominican vegetable soup, Colombian sancocho and many more. En fin [In short], the plantain’s contribution to Latin American foodways is just one more example of how cultures migrate and mix, enriching our lives, often in ways we may never contemplate.
Here’s our adaptation of the classic Dominican sopa de plátano.

The Hola Cultura adapted this recipe by consulting recipes on The Girl Cooks Healthy, Qué Rica Vida and the Dominican Cooking blogs.
Interesting links we found while doing our research:
– Copy edited by Kami Waller