It's been most of a month, about time I wrap up this report.
Our last full day in Cusco, we took a tour run by the brother-in-law of one of Sue's co-workers. I highly recommend
https://www.banderitascusco.com/ -- Silverio is very knowledgeable, and we had a lot of fun, at the Maras salt pools and Moray agricultural experimental station, and a village with traditional weavers.
The salt pools get rather muddy in the rainy season, but it's still awfully cool. This has supposedly been "mined" for about 2000 years. We picked up some pink "fleur de sel"-style salt and some very tasty smoked salt, plus some fried beans and corn for snacking.
The Moray pits (or as I like to call them, the Vegan Sarlac) are where the Incas brought earth from across the empire and created microclimates to test various breeds of potatoes and corn:
That evening we ate at Pachupapa in the San Blas artisan district not far from the Cusco Plaza de Armas (but it's uphill, the altitude is still killing me here). It started raining as we got there, so we passed on sitting in the courtyard near the ovens, where they make these tiny rolls not much bigger than my thumb, seem to be the standard all over Cusco, it may be an altitude thing? They were served with a spicy tomato sauce, and a green sauce that reminded me a lot of Indian cilantro chutney.
(Sue's wine in the background is another Tannat blend)
For a starter, we had the potatoes (which we realized we hadn't eaten many of in the land they came from), which were served cold, with huacaina (yellow) and ocopa (green, very similar to the bread spread), sliced boiled egg and olives.
Sue had one of the national dishes, Aji de Gallina, succulent chicken in a yellow chile sauce.
I had the Pachupapa -- their combo platter: Alpaca brochette (nicely marinated, very tender and tasty), tamal with aji chile, stuffed rocoto chile and potatoes.
Great food, highly recommended.
Pachupapa
Carmen Bajo 120, Cusco 08000, Peru
Phone: +51 84 241318
http://www.cuscorestaurants.com/restaurant/pachapapa/(menu only in Spanish)
The following day, we did a little more touring of Incan sites near Cusco. When we got to the airport, they asked if we wanted to leave earlier -- now -- and we got to Lima much earlier than expected. We were able to move our dinner reservation up an hour and still wander around the Miraflores neighborhood for a couple hours.
A nearby park had some sort of event going on (some folk dancing, some flea market stuff, some artists), and we got an order of what I thought were onion rings from a cart, but turned out to be something more like a ring-shaped sweet-potato fritter called "picarones." I didn't get a picture, because they were dripping with sticky syrup and we were dodging yellowjackets.
Prior to dinner, we came across a small mall, bought some chocolates at one store, and wandered through a Target-like store called Wong (mostly groceries, a fair amount of housewares, some furniture and electronics), where we bought some hot sauces, and some aji pepper paste.
Wong
Balta Shopping, Malecón Balta 626
+51 990 280 132
http://www.wong.peDinner was at Panchita, billed as Criolla (creole) cuisine. We'd seen a note that the portions here are huge, and the prices were not unreasonable, and the appetizers all sounded so interesting, we ordered four appetizers, but probably could have been satiated on two (especially if one was the tamales):
Cassava fries with five sauces: a salsa-like one, aji, mustard, cilantro and an aoili. This should have been our warning about portion sizes, those planks of cassava are huge.
[url=https://flic.kr/p/24Hp8nB]
But then we were fooled by a couple dainty empanadas, filled with stir-fried beef
The Peruvian wings were tasty, but I'd have liked a little more heat. The onions added a nice contrast, but hard to eat because they don't stick to the wings
And five tamales, each one about the size of Sue's fist. Two cilantro (they were out of the artichoke), corn with aji (the best of the bunch and we still didn't finish it), creole maize filled with pork, and the Marthita made with quinoa. I need to figure out how to make the aji, which did not have any meat in it, but fresh and ground corn, and a great, warm, chile and garlic flavor.
I definitely want to try this restaurant again, hopefully with a bunch of people, and maybe get past the first page of the menu to the grilled, fried, and stewed items.
Panchita Miraflores
Calle 2 de Mayo 298, Lima, Perú
(51-1) 242-5957
http://panchita.pe/enAnd that wraps the eating part of our adventure up, except for breakfast sandwiches from Potbelly at the Houston airport.
What is patriotism, but the love of good things we ate in our childhood?
-- Lin Yutang