Just returned from Peru and amongst the food finds, had my first taste of guinea pig. Guinea pig or “Cuy” in Spanish, is for Peruvians what suckling pig is for Chinese – a glorious delicacy that is often eaten as a part of family celebrations. The texture is like Peking duck – moist meat and crispy skin but with the smoky, fatty aromatic taste of pork belly. I tried it both styles – fancy and old-school.
The fancy style was a small strip of the oven roasted rodent on a bed of polenta served at a restaurant inside The Hotel Monestario in Cusco. There was a nicely browned skin capping a fillet of tender meat, but no real sense that there was a guinea pig there. The polenta was a nice soothing touch, but However, the old-school style can be found at La Chomba – a local hole in the wall that spit roasts these pigs whole with head and everything and serves them on a bed of tomatoes with local Peruvian potatoes. Being Cantonese, I’m partial to the old-school, see your animal and tear it apart with your bare hands way of eating. The fact that there was nothing but a spit and picnic tables between you and your meat somehow made it a more primal eating experience – no fancy carved garnishes or drizzled sauces to get in the way of the meat that is best cooked perfectly and eaten simply.
What’s your preference when eating meat–see the whole thing (head, feet etc) or obscure the evidence that it’s a critter that runs or swims?





dog on a spit works for this chinaman.
but in all seriousness, go vegetarian – it’s also good for the environment.
I prefer my cuy like i prefer most of my dinners, faceless. Still looks good. It’s like the cornish hens of chicken dinners.
that’s just downright monstrous.
i’m going to a pet shop now and i’m bringing my A-1.
hungry…
I never thought of eating a guinea pig… but you’re right. They must be numerous and hell, might as well eat them. (I often look at my cat and think how soft she might taste… I know I’ve fed her long enough.)
I think I prefer my food with a face, because I like that experience BUT, I prefer polenta.
Looks good! There shouldn’t be any shame in knowing how to cook up and eat a fine lower animal.
In the South Pacific in the 1800s, sailors were shocked to see the cannibalism practiced among various cultural groups.
The natives were shocked and found it outrageous that the English married their cousins.
Hmmm, cuy or chicken, donkeys or cows, dog or sheep, … its all in the mind?
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