🇨🇱 Chilean Cuisine
Pacific coast and Andean tradition featuring cazuela, empanadas, and seafood curanto
Definition
Chilean cuisine is the national culinary tradition of Chile, a geographically elongated South American nation stretching along the Pacific coast from the Atacama Desert in the north to Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego in the south. This extreme latitudinal range — encompassing desert, Mediterranean, temperate rainforest, and subarctic zones — produces one of the most ecologically diverse ingredient landscapes on the continent, and its culinary identity is shaped accordingly by stark regional contrasts held together by shared preparation traditions and social rituals around food.\n\nAt its core, Chilean cuisine balances Andean indigenous staples — maize (choclo), potato, quinoa, and squash — with abundant Pacific seafood and the pastoral products of the Central Valley's fertile agricultural heartland: wheat, legumes, beef, pork, and wine. Dominant preparations include cazuela (a slow-simmered meat and vegetable broth), empanadas de pino (baked turnovers filled with seasoned ground beef, onion, olive, egg, and raisin), and the communal pit-cooked feast known as curanto, traditional to the Chiloé Archipelago. Flavor profiles tend toward the savory and restrained, with merquén (a smoked chili condiment of Mapuche origin) serving as a distinctive indigenous spice note. Compared to the fierier traditions of neighboring Peru or Bolivia, Chilean cooking generally favors subtle seasoning, with heat and complexity introduced through condiments rather than embedded in base preparations.
Historical Context
Chilean culinary traditions are rooted in the foodways of the indigenous peoples of the region, principally the Mapuche of the central-southern territories and the Aymara and Atacameño cultures of the northern Andes. These groups contributed foundational ingredients — potato, maize, quinoa, chili, and shellfish — as well as core techniques such as underground cooking (curanto en hoyo) and the use of dried and preserved foods adapted to arid and cold environments. Spanish colonial settlement from the 16th century introduced wheat, cattle, pork, olive oil, and wine viticulture, producing the mestizo synthesis that characterizes the national tradition. The establishment of large fundos (agricultural estates) in the Central Valley entrenched wheat-based and meat-centered cooking as a dominant mode among the criollo population.\n\nSubsequent waves of European immigration in the 19th and early 20th centuries — particularly from Germany, Croatia, and Britain — left localized culinary imprints, most visibly in the German-influenced pastry and dairy traditions of the Lake District (Los Lagos region) and the Croatian influence on viticulture and cured meats in parts of the south. The mid-20th century saw increasing urbanization and the standardization of a recognizable national cuisine through cookbooks, school curricula, and state institutions, even as regional traditions in Chiloé, the Norte Chico, and the Atacama continued to maintain distinct identities.
Geographic Scope
Chilean cuisine is practiced throughout the Republic of Chile, from the Atacama Desert in the north to Cape Horn in the south, with significant regional sub-traditions in the Chiloé Archipelago, the Andean altiplano, and the Central Valley wine country. Chilean diaspora communities in Argentina, the United States, Sweden, and Australia maintain elements of the tradition abroad.
References
- Pereira Salas, E. (1977). Apuntes para la historia de la cocina chilena. Editorial Universitaria.culinary
- Weismantel, M. J. (1988). Food, Gender, and Poverty in the Ecuadorean Andes. University of Pennsylvania Press.academic
- Muñoz, O., & Tangol, N. (2013). Gastronomía del mar de Chile. Fundación Futuro.culinary
- Montecino Aguirre, S. (2005). Cocinas mestizas de Chile: La olla deleitosa. Museo Chileno de Arte Precolombino.cultural
Recipe Types (116)
Easiest and Best Guacamole with Tomatoes and Chiles
El Dooglitas Mango Salsa
El Vinagre Chilera

Empanadas de Horno

Ensalada a la Chilena

Escabeche de Pescado
Firecracker Burgers
Firecracker Grilled Shrimp

Firecracker Marinade

Green Chile Stew

Grilled Lamb Chops

Grilled Salmon with Mango Salsa
Grilled Summer Fruit
Gulfstream
Herb-steamed Chilean Sea Bass
Homemade Egg Substitute III

Honduran Huevos con Salsa de Chiles
Huevos con Pilco de Choclo
Jalapeno Glazed Seared Salmon

Korean Shortribs
Lime-soaked Cumin-crusted Skirt Steak
Malai Mixed Vegetable
Marinated Grilled Sea Bass
Miso-seared Chilean Seabass
Nutty Brussels Sprouts
Nutty Rice and Chile Salad
Palta con Crema de Salmon

Pan Seared Chicken Breast
Pan-seared Chilean Sea Bass with Summerwhite Peach Salsa
Pan Seared Scallops with Cayenne Chocolate Sauce

Pebre
Pennsylvania Dutch Amish Dessert
Pilar's Baby Lima Bean Casserole
Pollo Arvejado

Pollo Escabechado

Porotos Granados
Rabbit in Orange Sauce
Rabbit in Peanut Sauce

Red Chile Stew

Reindling
Rice and Cherries Jubilee
Roasted Chilean Sea Bass with Seared Tomatoes and Leeks
Saurebraten and Ginger
Shrikand
Sopa de Lentejas de la Tia Julita
Sopa de Topinambur
Southwestern Dip
Spicy Black Beans
