PATASKA
History and taste
The Pataska
is a spicy stew of mote (boiled maize) with charqui (salted/dried
meat) and potatoes.
In the Feast of Crosses in Ayacucho, Perú, the young men
cook pataska.
In Chiu Chiu, an Ancestral Atacameño town in Region II
of Chile, the pataska is also prepared. The villagers believe
that the pataska is part of the Antay tradition .
Pataska is
a Quechua word that means "grains of maize prepared like
mote that burst when is cooked".
Legend
The chronicles about the Conquest of Perú, tell us
that the Inca Atahualpa was murdered by the followers of Pizarro,
and his body was showed to terrify others natives in the main
square of Cajamarca. On the following day, the head of the Inca
disappeared. The natives belived that the head had been buried
in some place of Peru, waiting for a new Inca that would growth
from it.
This legend is well-known like the Inkarri.
At the present time, in the crosses of many Peruvian towns and
in special in the district of Luricocha-Ayacucho there is a picture
of Jesus Christ.
Prescription
Ingredients
for 6 people:
·400 gr. of boiled maize.
·1 kg of groound lamb
·1 kg of Mondongo (entrails
) (cut into small pieces)
·2 roasted yellow dry red peppers
·garlic, pepper, comine and salt to taste
·fresh oregano
·parsley
·oil
·4 liters water
Preparation
Soak mote during 2 days. In a large
pot with oil, frie garlic and the red peppers. When they take
color, put the meats, mondongo and mote into the pot. Cover with
water and let cook by 3 hours. When it is ready, add the oregano
and parsley. To serve hot.
Source: Rodolfo Tafur - www.nutricionyrecetas.com