
Top 10 Peruvian food experiences
From roasted guinea pig to the world’s most pungent potatoes, Peru’s cuisine isn’t for the faint hearted – but fortune favours the brave. Don’t leave ’til you’ve tried these dishes, says Julia Hammond…
Ceviche

Ceviche (Shutterstock)
These days, tumbo juice is usually replaced with the more widely-available lime, which marinates the raw fish to perfection in around twenty minutes. You won’t find it anywhere after five, even if you travel the entire length of Peru’s 1500 mile Pacific coast – cevicherias close in the afternoon as the fish is considered past its best by dinner time.
Cuy

Grilled guinea pig (Shutterstock)
The creature is typically eaten roasted, its four tiny legs splayed like a spatchcock chicken across your plate. It’s a Marmite kind of dish; while some rave over it, the squeamish will struggle to get their head around eating something that they once cuddled and stroked as a kid. (Honestly, no one in Peru eats a pet; these guinea pigs are reared for the table.)
Obliging waiters will pander to your sensibilities by chopping off the head and four paws if you ask, though they’ll be having a laugh at your expense all the way back to the kitchen. If you really can’t bear to eat it, lie – tell your friends it tastes like a cross between crispy duck and roast chicken.
Try cuy on or off the bone at Cicciolina, Calle Triunfo 393, Cusco.
Hot stone cooking
Not only is the place constructed from sillar, it also heats stones originating from the slopes of the volcano to cook and serve a trilogy of locally reared meat: alpaca, lamb and beef. This sizzling platter is a popular draw so you’ll need to prop up the bar for a while if you don’t have a reservation. Don’t worry about making a mess: the restaurant provides bibs.
Chuño

Chuno potatoes (Shutterstock)
The strangest to foreign palates has to be chuño, small potatoes that are spread out on the gentle slopes of the Altiplano to dry in the high altitude sun by day and freeze as the temperatures plunge at night. The result is a bitter, blackened potato used as an ingredient in soups.
It’s a favourite practical joke to swamp these revolting tubers with so much soup that they are completely submerged, leaving unsuspecting visitors to pop them into their mouths thinking they are regular potatoes. If you’re truly blessed, a wrinkly-skinned chicken foot will be down there as well. You should try them at least once if only to appreciate how lucky we are that they’re rarely exported.
Lúcuma

Lucuma (Shutterstock)
Popular as an ice cream flavour, as a fruit it has the texture of a hard-boiled egg, claggy on the tongue. So try it buzzed up in a blender with some milk and let the smooth butterscotch liquid slide down. That’s just the way they serve it at my favourite Lima café, La Bodega Verde in the arty Barranco district. Sit in their courtyard garden and escape the crazy traffic for a while.
Powdered lúcuma is available in the UK (from Holland and Barrett, Ocado), though it’s no substitute for the real thing.
Inca Kola
Launched to celebrate Lima’s 400th anniversary, its initial advertising slogan ran “There is only one Inca Kola and it’s like no other.” That’s true. We should be thankful for that. It’s the reason I spent a flight over the Nazca Lines with my head in a sick bag, but don’t let that stop you trying it for yourself.
Beer
By the end of the bottle, let alone the evening, no one has a clue how much they’ve drunk but everyone’s spirits are high. This isn’t the place to drink alone so gather a group of friends and see if you can choose your favourite. I recommend Cusqueña Negra, Peru’s answer to Guinness.
Cuajada
While you perch on a decades-old wooden stool alongside market traders on their break, the lovely ladies will serve your cuajada (milk curds) in a glass, lukewarm and topped up with algarrobina (black carob syrup). It slides down and soothes the throat – perfect for the morning after a raucous night on the town.
Pisco

Pisco sour (Shutterstock)
One thing is certain, both drinks are extremely strong grape brandies and, drunk neat, both will attack your throat and render you temporarily speechless. Drink it as the locals do: shake egg whites, sugar syrup and a dash of angostura bitters with a measure or two of the demon drink to create a pisco sour.
A word of caution: altitude magnifies the effects of this utterly irresistible but lethal cocktail. It’s the reason why I ended up lying in the middle of an Atacama Desert road staring up at the starriest sky I’ve ever seen. I swear I’d only had two. Instead, follow in the footsteps of Richard Nixon, Ernest Hemingway and John Wayne and sip it slowly in the genteel surroundings of the Country Club Hotel in Lima where you remain safely at sea level.
Novo Andino cuisine
Novo Andino cuisine is inventive, its presentation so perfect you’ll be reluctant to dig in. But dig in you must. Try the roasted goat with creamy Lima bean mash or the medallion of alpaca served with a delicate corn soufflé. In between courses, diners are entitled to a free guided tour of the ruins. Go in the evening when the pyramid is creatively lit, but choose a summer night to avoid the drizzle that Lima endures for much of the southern hemisphere winter.
Main image: Ceviche (Shutterstock)


















