Creole cuisine speciality of the Indian Ocean

Flavours & Culture

Food & Flavours

Creole recipes, exceptional produce, markets and tables: the tastes and the producers that tell the identities of the Indian Ocean islands.

Guides

Indian Ocean Food and Creole CuisineIndian Ocean food tells the history of islands through rice, spices, fish, coconut, chili, pickles, lentils, vanilla, street snacks and family recipes. It is shaped by African, Indian, European, Malagasy, Arab, Chinese and island influences. Indian Ocean Markets, Spices and Street FoodIndian Ocean markets are where travel becomes concrete. Fruit, spices, fish, textiles, snacks, flowers, vanilla and baskets show the islands through daily life rather than postcard distance. Rougail saucisse recipe from Reunion IslandRougail saucisses is one of the dishes travellers remember after visiting Reunion Island. The recipe looks simple, but the details matter: the sausage, the salt level, the tomato reduction and the way the dish is served with rice, beans and a spicy condiment. Reunion chicken curry : cari poulet recipeReunion chicken curry, or cari poulet, is one of the most useful Creole recipes to understand Reunion Island food. It is simple, but it is not a generic curry. The base is onion, tomato, garlic, turmeric and thyme, served with rice, beans and a chili condiment. Rhum arrange recipe : homemade infused rumThis rhum arrange recipe is simple. It uses white rum, fruit, spices, a clean glass jar and time. The goal is a smooth homemade infused rum, not a fast cocktail. Mauritius street food : dholl puri and snacksMauritius street food is one of the best ways to understand the island. Indian, Creole, Chinese and Muslim influences meet in small stalls, markets and bus-station snacks. Dholl puri, gateaux piment, dumplings, fried noodles and alouda are not side notes. They are part of everyday Mauritius. Madagascar Bourbon vanilla beans : buying guideMadagascar Bourbon vanilla is one of the world's most recognisable vanilla names. It connects flavor, farming, manual pollination, global trade and the slow preparation of a fragile spice.
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