Bogotá is booming and the Caribbean coast is calling, says Elsa Young, who spent a blissful holiday eating her way around Colombia. Reasons to go: the best coffee, the freshest seafood, the zingiest exotic fruit … Oh, and the beaches aren’t bad either
I’M LOST. In Colombia.
Not an experience I’d ever imagined I would enjoy … until the Sunday afternoon it happens to me. We are in the old colonial town of Villa de Leyva, northeast of Bogotá, and I’ve wandered ahead of my husband, anxious to snap a shot of the cobbled street clear of the truck that had been stealing the view. And now Russ is nowhere to be seen.
I sit down on a stone bench in a grassy square. It’s quite delightful. A father watches over his son playing happily, students are drinking beers around the fountain and plenty of people are passing me with armfuls of fresh produce.
My excitement at the prospect of discovering a market trumps my curiosity about where on Earth Russ has gotten to and I march further up the cobbled street to the foot of the hill, in the direction of smoky air and music…
What an unexpected treat awaits. There’s organic produce everywhere. Locals are buying their supplies: aloe leaves for juicing, honey on the comb, vegetables both strange and recognisable. And finally I have a chance to identify the wonders of Colombian fruit firsthand. There are tangy uchuva (cape gooseberries) by the bucket load, raspberries and blackberries, mangoes, sour-sweet carambola (star fruit), curuba (banana passion fruit), and maracuya (granadillas). I also finally lay eyes on the famous guanabana fruit, so good it’s the stuffof fantasy: a magnificent oversized custard apple with black seeds, the perfect blend of sweetness and tartness.
Esta historia es de la edición August 2017 de Woolworths TASTE.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor ? Conectar
Esta historia es de la edición August 2017 de Woolworths TASTE.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor? Conectar
Award-winning Food: Trending Plates
Fine-dining takes on both nostalgic and African ingredients - from Cremora and polony (yes!) to okra and beetroot - were food trends singled out by the judges of the 2022 Eat Out Woolworths Restaurant Awards.
Everything you need to know about quinoa
If it was good enough to sustain the Incan armies - and NASA's astronauts - you'd better believe this protein-rich seed will see you through your afternoon slump.
PIGS IN BLANKETS
The kids will love these quick-and-easy snacks that won't break the (piggy) bank.
82 words on...
THE FROZEN APEROL SPRITZ is the hottest way to keep cool this summer, says Jeanne Calitz.
MEET ME AT THE RIVER
Plan a visit to the new Mukwa River Lodge on the banks of the Zambezi to experience Zambian food with a twist, courtesy of head cook Aaron Menezes and four passionate members of his kitchen team.
FIRE STARTER
Celeb TV chef Clem Pedro - of Afternoon Express and Expresso fame takes the art of hosting to pro level and not because he went to hotel school or worked for TASTE, but because he started in his mom's kitchen. We asked him to share his food nerd roots and family braai secrets.
PLANTS IN PARADISE
Former Durban creative (and one-time carnivore) Neil Roake and his daughter Jordan's epic travels led them to collaborate on the all veg cookbook Castaway. They shared their meat-free adventures on the Filipino island of Siargao with TASTE.
ΤΟ MAY-ΤΟ, ΤΟ MAH-ΤΟ
Midsummer tomatoes are impossible to resist, we know. So when you find yourself with a bounty of exotic varieties - heirlooms, Italian Romas, ripe Mediterraneans and sweet Rosalinis - Hannah Lewry is here to help.
HOME TRUTHS
At her Joburg eatery, established in the iconic former Women's Jail at Constitution Hill, Mpho Phalane has worked to create a space that both honours the historic site and feels like home. She spoke to Khanya Mzongwana about the food journey that brought her here.
Morogo magic
Budget-friendly indigenous leafy greens - fresh, sautéed or preserved for later use are on Mokgadi Itsweng's menu at this time of year.