Monday, 09 June 2014 01:00

"Horrible" Gofio: The Canary Island Soul Food

Gofio is soul food in the Canary Islands. Most Canarians were weaned on bananas mashed up with gofio and many still eat it every day. It is so tightly entwined with local identity that it is best not not to tell anyone on the islands if you don't like it. At the same time Canarians aren't stupid. They enjoy cake and chocolate and ice cream just like everyone else. They wouldn't eat gofio if it was horrible. Wwould they?

 

 

There are plenty of Canarians who can't stand it. Recently a local taxi driver told me that during his childhood in the lean days after the Civil War gofio was all there was. He said the taste reminded him of being hungry and miserable and that he would never eat it again.

Perhaps gofio's image problem is because most visitors to the Canary Islands try it in resort restaurants or those barns in the hills that caters to bus loads of tourists at a time. Somehow gofio doesn't take well to industrial-scale preparation or disinterested cooks.

Visit a local market where they are milling fresh gofio from still-hot roasted kernels and you start to understand its allure. The rich, malty smell (a mixture of popcorn and brewing beer) hits that spot in the brain that makes you go mmmmm. Freshly milled gofio is a whole different animal to shop-bought stuff. It's much richer and the aroma spreads through the kitchen cupboards.

Gofio Dishes

Gofio escaldado is a thick porridge made from gofio mixed with fish soup and mint leaves and served with pieces of sweet red onion. You scoop it up with the onion and eat the lot. Mint and onion is a classic combination of flavours that goes well with the warm nuttiness of gofio. Gofio escaldado goes with deep fried fish in a shabby restaurant right by the sea. Inexplicably, you always have to ask for extra onion pieces.

Pello de gofio is as close to the original Guanche way of eating it as we get today. It is gofio mixed with water and a little oil. Nowadays it comes almost exclusively with sancocho fish stew; cooked up in huge quantities during local romerias (fiestas). Sweetened with honey or ripe bananas and with a handful of almonds and raisins thrown in, sweet pella is a common romeria dessert.

Gofio dissolved in a big cafe con leche is the traditional breakfast of the Cumbres. The trick is keep stirring as you drink it to stop the gofio from settling. On a cold day in the mountains nothing fills your stomach like cafe con gofio.

Desserts are the best way to approach gofio if you are wary of the texture. Many bars and restaurants serve home-made gofio mousse and gofio ice cream. Both are excellent and have no cloying mouthfeel at all. The ice cream, swerved with a dollop of bienmesabe almond paste, or a drizzle of guarapo palm syrup, is excellent.

Gofio doen't deserve its reputation as an icky foodstuff. Its rich flavour and importance in Canarian history and culture mean that you really should try it if you come to the Canary Islands.

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Tip of the day

  • Tip Of The Day: Avoid Bank Card Charges By Paying In Euros
    Tip Of The Day: Avoid Bank Card Charges By Paying In Euros

    Save money and avoid rip-off bank charges while in Gran Canaria by paying in euros when using your credit or debit card.

    Many bars and restaurants in Gran Canaria, and in almost all European holiday destinations, give you the option of paying in euros or in your home currency. Opting for your own currency, while it may seem like the safer option, can add as much as 5% to the bill as it triggers dynamic currency conversion. 

    DCC basically means that the exchange rate is calculated at point of sale rather than by your bank. It allows you to see the total cost of the transaction in your own currency but adds up to 5% to the total because it uses a terrible exchange rate. 

    Since the extra money is shared between your bank and the merchant, some places will automatically bill you in your own currency and hope you don't notice. You have the legal right to refuse and void the transaction should this happen. 

    ATMs too

    The same applies when taking money out of ATM machines in Gran Canaria (and anywhere in Europe); Always choose the local currency option to avoid losing money to poor exchange rates.

    If you opt for the local currency option, using bank ATMs is often the cheapest and safest way of getting euros in Gran Canaria. It's far safer than having a big pile of euros hidden in your room or tucked into your shorts.

    More details in this Daily Telegraph article.

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