Almojábana

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Almojábana

Almojábana is a type of bread made with cuajada cheese and corn flour.[1][2]

Quick Facts Type, Region or state ...
Almojábana
TypeBread
Region or stateLatin America
Associated cuisineChile, Argentina, Colombia, Puerto Rico
Main ingredientsCorn flour, butter or margarine, eggs, cheese, sugar, leavening agent
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About

An almojábana is a small, bun-shaped bread with a tart flavor. It has some variations between Hispanic America and Spain.

The etymology stems from Andalusī Arabic and that in turn from classical Arabic المُجَٰبَّنة "almuǧábbana" (made of cheese), the measure II passive participle of the root ج-ب-ن, the same root as جُبْن "jubn" (cheese).[3]

Versions

Colombia

Thumb
A traditional breakfast in Bogotá and the surrounding region consisting of hot chocolate, cheese, and two kinds of bread: almojábana (left) and pan de queso (right)

Almojábanas are made with masarepa or pre-cooked white cornmeal, cottage cheese, butter, baking powder, salt, eggs, and milk.

Puerto Rico

In Puerto Rico almojábanas are small fried balls eaten in the northwest part of the island. They are made with rice flour, wheat flour, sugar, milk, butter, baking powder, salt, eggs, and fresh white cheese called queso de país. A sweeter version is served on Christmas using coconut milk and vanilla. Sweet almojábanas are rolled in cinnamon sugar and served with a guava sauce. The Almojában Festival is celebrated in Lares, Puerto Rico in October.[4]

Spain

Spanish almojábanas do not use cheese; they are made with wheat flour, olive oil, salt, eggs, and honey or sugar or both. They are typical from southern Aragón, southern Alicante, Murcia and La Gomera island.

See also

References

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