Garífuna Sere de Mariscos is a luminous coconut seafood stew, prized along the northern coast of Honduras and across Garífuna communities in Belize and Guatemala. The word “sere” broadly refers to a coconut-based stew, rich yet gentle, with a silkiness that only coconut milk and slow simmering can bring. This version celebrates the ocean’s abundance: firm white fish, shrimp, and (when available) conch or crab. It’s served with machuca—pounded plantain dumplings that give each bowl body and a satisfying, rustic chew. Together, sere and machuca make a complete, comforting meal with deep cultural resonance.
The Garífuna people trace their roots to the island of St. Vincent, with ancestry intertwined among West African, Island Carib, and Arawak peoples. After forced displacement in the late 18th century, Garífuna communities established vibrant coastal settlements across Central America. Food became a keeper of identity. Coconut, plantain, yuca, and fresh fish tell the story of survival and celebration; cooking techniques echo both West African mortar-and-pestle traditions and Indigenous knowledge of cassava, herbs, and peppers. Sere is cooked for family gatherings, religious festivities, and everyday nourishment. The accompanying cassava bread (ereba) connects directly to ancestral cultivation and painstaking preparation of bitter cassava. In every spoonful, you taste ingenuity—how coastal people transform humble, local ingredients into a dish that’s both restorative and festive.
Traditionally, sere is served with cassava bread (ereba), whose delicate crunch contrasts the stew’s creaminess. Lime wedges brighten each bite, and a shower of chopped culantro or cilantro adds a green, citrusy lift. You can enrich the stew with okra for natural thickening, or add green banana and yuca for starch and tradition. A vegetarian riff swaps seafood for roasted pumpkin, okra, and hearts of palm, simmered in the same coconut-thyme base.
Garífuna Sere de Mariscos is more than a recipe—it’s a living tradition. Each family seasons it a little differently, guided by the day’s catch and what the garden offers. Take your time, simmer softly, and taste often. When you set a bowl down—fragrant with coconut and thyme, dotted with tender seafood, anchored by plantain—you’re sharing a story of ocean, land, and resilience.