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Chefs carving out a higher profile Haiti wants the world to know its rich flavors

- By David McFadden

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — In a dining room in a wealthy district in the hills above Haiti’s capital, waiters in black outfits whisk plates of crunchy malanga fritters and a creamy cornmeal dish to well-off locals and tourists. In the kitchen, the chef ladles glistening, fresh conch into a pot as his staff dice tomatoes and watercress.

Haitian cuisine is a spicy confluence of French, Spanish, African and Amerindian cooking traditions that blends indigenous ingredient­s like the rich, earthy black mushroom known as djon djon with a variety of cooking techniques, crusted baguettes and flaky pastries. For decades, Haitian food has been seen as simple, hearty fare best simmered for hours over charcoal stoves at home or fried up and served in cheap curbside restaurant­s. Haitians who could afford a night out at a restaurant used to opt for versions of continenta­l menus or a generic Caribbean fusion mimicking the food in island resorts.

In recent years a new generation of Haitian chefs here and abroad has begun reimaginin­g the country’s cuisine. Traditiona­l delicacies like the milky cornmeal beverage called akasan; the fiery carrot and cabbage condiment called pikliz; citrus-marinated chicken with boiled cashews; and whole fish in spiced broth are being prepared using haute cuisine techniques and served in the growing number of restaurant­s serving foreigners and Haiti’s small middle- and upper-class.

“It’s a real exciting time right now for Haitian gastronomy. We have serious, bona fide culinarian­s who are creative and focused on raising the profile of our food,” chef Jouvens Jean said as chilelaced shrimp sizzled in a pan at Jojo Restaurant in Petionvill­e.

Accomplish­ed chefs like Jean and Stephan Berrouet-Durand moved back to their homeland from the United States, importing the presentati­on and kitchen know-how of the various countries where they’ve worked, while others are increasing­ly vocal ambassador­s for their food culture overseas, appearing on U.S. and European cooking programs.

“Suddenly, a lot of Haitian chefs don’t have this fear of saying H`aitian cuisine’ out loud. It is becoming a very popular thing,” said Georges Laguerre, a Miami-based food entreprene­ur who ran a Haitian eatery in Los Angeles for over Instructor Chef Marie Solange Chevalier talks to students at the Hoteliere D'Haiti school in Port-au-Prince. a decade.

Dependence on food imports has grown as a result of intractabl­e economic stagnation, but local favorites like malanga root, chayote squash and a dark spinach are still grown organicall­y on farmland plowed by oxen and maintained without pesticides or chemical fertilizer­s only because most farmers could never dream of affording them.

The fact that Haiti has a vibrant food culture at all can be surprising to those who only associate this Caribbean nation with hunger and crushing poverty. But even through decades of decline and recurrent political turmoil, Haiti never lost its delicious recipes.

“I think one of Haiti’s greatest resources is its food. I have yet to meet anyone who did not appreciate the flavors of traditiona­l Haitian cuisine,” said Nadege Fleurimond, a Haitian-born writer and caterer based in New York City.

Some beloved dishes have roots stretching back to Haiti’s founding on Jan. 1, 1804, following the world’s only successful slave rebellion. The vibrantly colored pumpkin soup known as joumou is a typical Sunday dish and a must on independen­ce day for the world’s first black republic. During the dark days of bondage, plantation slaves in Haiti were prohibited from eating an aromatic squash soup — a favorite of their French masters — or much of anything else other than rudimentar­y provisions.

“When we got our independen­ce what better way to celebrate thantoeat the very thing that we were unable to eat as slaves,” Fleurimond said.

Haitian restaurant­s and food festivals are springing up in cities such as Miami and Montreal, where members of the Grammywinn­ing rock group Arcade Fire back a Haitian eatery that serves specialtie­s like stewed oxtail over rice along with cocktails made from the country’s Barbancour­t rum.

One famed chef, Spanish-born Jose Andres, turned his culinary adventures around Haiti into a 2015 television documentar­y.

In a culinary school in downtown Port-au-Prince operated by Andres’ nonprofit and the Haitian government, young people eagerly prepare for careers as the nation’s chefs and food-industry profession­als, learning the basics of preparing dishes delectable to the eye as well as the palate.

“Haiti has a rich culinary history and we make sure we celebrate that in our curriculum,” said Andres.

 ??  ?? Jojo Restaurant assistant chef Gedeon Jean prepares fish in spiced broth in Petionvill­e, Haiti.
Jojo Restaurant assistant chef Gedeon Jean prepares fish in spiced broth in Petionvill­e, Haiti.
 ?? PHOTOS BY DIEU NALIO CHERY/AP ??
PHOTOS BY DIEU NALIO CHERY/AP

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