Riz Frit aux Fruits de Mer des Andes : Fusion Pérou-Asie

Riz Frit aux Fruits de Mer des Andes : Fusion Pérou-Asie

(Andean Seafood Fried Rice: Peruvian-Asian Fusion)

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Portions
4
Taille de portion
1 assiette (250g)
Temps de préparation
20 Minutes
Temps de cuisson
25 Minutes
Temps total
45 Minutes
Riz Frit aux Fruits de Mer des Andes : Fusion Pérou-Asie Riz Frit aux Fruits de Mer des Andes : Fusion Pérou-Asie Riz Frit aux Fruits de Mer des Andes : Fusion Pérou-Asie Riz Frit aux Fruits de Mer des Andes : Fusion Pérou-Asie
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Mise à jour
septembre 08, 2025

Ingrédients

Nutrition

  • Portions: 4
  • Taille de portion: 1 assiette (250g)
  • Calories: 550 kcal
  • Carbohydrates: 64 g
  • Protein: 28 g
  • Fat: 16 g
  • Fiber: 5 g
  • Sugar: 4 g
  • Sodium: 1050 mg
  • Cholesterol: 155 mg
  • Calcium: 120 mg
  • Iron: 2.9 mg

Instructions

  • 1 - Prepare the Ingredients:
    Cut all vegetables as indicated. Clean and pat dry seafood mix. If using yacón/Andean potato, dice into small cubes and keep in water to prevent browning. Beat the eggs lightly in a bowl.
  • 2 - Make the scramble:
    Heat a wok or large frying pan on high. Add a touch of oil, then scramble eggs until softly set. Transfer to a plate.
  • 3 - Sauté the Aromatics:
    Add more oil. Sauté onion until translucent, add garlic, red bell pepper, and aji amarillo. Cook until fragrance blooms (2 minutes).
  • 4 - Cook Andean vegetables:
    Add diced yacón or potato (and peas, if using). Stir-fry for 2 minutes so potatoes soften but remain crisp.
  • 5 - Stir-fry seafood:
    Increase heat. Add seafood mix, some salt and pepper. Stir-fry until opaque and just cooked (2-3 mins), then immediately transfer to a plate to avoid overcooking.
  • 6 - Fry the rice:
    Add cooled rice to pan with a little more oil. Stir well to break clumps. Pour soy sauce and sesame oil around sides for even flavoring. Add chili to taste.
  • 7 - Combine & Finish:
    Return seafood and eggs. Sprinkle in green onion and cilantro. Gently toss so everything mixes and reheats. Season to taste. Fry, stirring constantly, until all is heated through.
  • 8 - Garnish and Serve:
    Dish onto plates. Garnish with extra cilantro. Serve hot with lime wedges.

En savoir plus sur: Riz Frit aux Fruits de Mer des Andes : Fusion Pérou-Asie

A delightfully spiced fusion rice dish mixing Andean seafood with classic Peruvian and Sino influences.

Arroz Chaufa de Mariscos Andinos: A Story of Maverick Fusion

Arroz Chaufa is Peru's take on Chinese fried rice, a beloved dish that arrived with the great waves of Chinese immigration (the "chifa" culture) in the 19th century. Since then, Peruvian cooks have creatively blended Chinese culinary rites with Peru's rich larder. Perhaps nowhere does this alchemy shine brighter than in Arroz Chaufa de Mariscos Andinos—a union of Peruvian Andes-sourced ingredients, coastal seafood treasures, and East Asian cooking technique.

Why This Recipe is Unique

This version is special for its cross-border, cross-altitude fusion. While classic chaufa includes pork, chicken, or beef, this recipe harnesses the fresh catch of the Pacific—shrimp, squid, scallops—imprinted with a distinctly Andean twist: the addition of yacón (a refreshingly crisp root not unlike jicama or tender potato) and a generous spoonful of the famed aji amarillo, the Peruvian yellow chili providing mild heat and sunbeam color. One can substitute true yacón with Andean or regular potato and still capture that lovely root vegetable note.

Unlike a standard fried rice, Arroz Chaufa de Mariscos Andinos leans more generously into herbs like cilantro and bold, bright ingredients such as aji. The finishing flourish—lime slices—adds a seaside zest unique to Peru's diverse foodways from highlands to coast.

Tips & Techniques

  1. Rice must be cold: Always use day-old or cooled rice for the best separation and char. Otherwise, the grains will clump.
  2. Fast and hot: The key to preserving seafood’s texture and capturing the elusive “wok hei” (breath of the wok) is cooking quickly over very high heat, so have all your mise en place ready.
  3. Aji amarillo Paste: Locate it in Latin groceries; if you can’t find it, you can mix yellow bell pepper and mild chili for color and a bit of heat.
  4. Mix, don't mash: Gently toss everything in the wok; over mixing will break down the seafood and make the rice mushy.
  5. Custom To Your Liking: Trade yacón for other Andean tubers or sweet potato if adventurous. Add more aji for spice-heads, garnish with edible Andean flowers, or scatter toasted cancha for extra crunch.

Cultural Significance

Peru is a living laboratory of culinary syncretism. Centuries of Incan, Spanish, African, Italian, Japanese, and Chinese arrivals have led to some of the world’s most hybridized, sophisticated food. Arroz chaufa, and by extension this Andean-seafood version, tells the story of working families, street vendors, and upscale restaurants all finding comfort and creativity in a simple stir-fry.

This isn’t just stir-fried rice, but a symbol of adaptability: as Asian labor built railroads and urban environments, their cooking anchored itself in Peru’s bountiful coast and high-mountain roots. The seaside meets mountain in traditions, taste, and texture.

Final Thoughts

Arroz Chaufa de Mariscos Andinos is a festive dish—meant for the middle of the table, familiar (fried rice!) yet full of deep, regional soul. Citrus, chili, rippling cilantro, and unctuous seafood ensure flavor in every bite. Like all true fusion, the beauty emerges not just from what's mixed, but in how ingredients are respected and celebrated in their moment of contact.

A drizzle of fresh lime or a dollop of aji salsa brings brightness, while the crunch of occasional andean root or peas rewards lucky forkfuls. Try it for your next celebratory meal or to invigorate leftover rice. It’s Peru, China, and the whole world—on a single plate.

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