
🇭🇹 Haitian Cuisine
African-French Creole tradition featuring griot, diri ak djon djon, and soup joumou
Definition
Haitian cuisine is the national culinary tradition of Haiti, the western third of the island of Hispaniola in the Greater Antilles, representing one of the most historically layered and culturally distinctive food cultures in the Caribbean. It is broadly classified as an Afro-Creole tradition, synthesizing the culinary practices of enslaved West and Central Africans with French colonial techniques, indigenous Taíno ingredients, and Spanish influences absorbed through shared Hispaniolan geography.
At its core, Haitian cuisine is defined by bold, herbaceous seasoning — particularly the foundational marinade known as *epis* (a blended paste of scallions, garlic, thyme, parsley, bell peppers, and Scotch bonnet), which underpins nearly every savory preparation. Pork occupies a central symbolic and culinary role, most iconically in *griot* (fried marinated pork), served alongside *pikliz* (a fiery pickled slaw of cabbage, carrots, and Scotch bonnet). Starches form the structural base of most meals: rice dishes such as *diri ak djon djon* (black mushroom rice) and *diri kole ak pwa* (rice and beans) are dietary staples, complemented by root vegetables including plantain, yam (*yanm*), breadfruit, and malanga. The cuisine favors deep frying, slow braising, and open-flame cooking. Flavors tend toward sour, savory, and piquant rather than sweet or aromatic in the South Asian sense — a profile that sharply distinguishes it from neighboring island traditions.
Historical Context
The foundations of Haitian cuisine were laid during the French colonial period (1697–1804), when Saint-Domingue became one of the wealthiest plantation colonies in the world. Enslaved Africans — drawn from a wide range of West and Central African ethnic groups including the Fon, Yoruba, Wolof, and Kongo — brought with them agricultural knowledge and culinary techniques that shaped the colony's food culture from the ground up. Taíno culinary legacies, including the use of cassava, sweet potato, and the technique of *barbacoa* (pit roasting), were absorbed into this emerging Creole synthesis. French haute cuisine contributed structured preparations, braising techniques, and the use of wine and citrus in marinades.
The Haitian Revolution (1791–1804), the only successful slave revolution in history, produced a cuisine that carried profound political symbolism. *Soup joumou* — a rich pumpkin and beef soup historically forbidden to enslaved people — became the dish of Haitian Independence Day (January 1, 1804) and was inscribed on UNESCO's Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity in 2021. Post-independence isolation, enforced by French reparations debt and international trade blockades, limited outside culinary influence and contributed to the cuisine's preservation of African and Creole foundations over the following two centuries.
Geographic Scope
Haitian cuisine is practiced throughout Haiti, including its capital Port-au-Prince and regional centers such as Cap-Haïtien and Jacmel. Significant diaspora communities in New York City, Miami, Montreal, Boston, and Paris sustain and evolve the tradition internationally.
References
- Coe, S. D. (1994). America's First Cuisines. University of Texas Press.academic
- Trouillot, M.-R. (1995). Silencing the Past: Power and the Production of History. Beacon Press.academic
- UNESCO. (2021). Joumou soup, a Haitian dish. Inscription on the Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity. United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization.cultural
- Wilk, R., & Barbosa, L. (Eds.). (2012). Rice as Self: Japanese Identities Through Time — see comparative chapter on Caribbean staple foods. Berg Publishers.academic
Recipe Types (139)

Acra
Aggie's Rolls
Apple Pie Spice
Artichoke and Roasted Red Pepper Salad with Roasted Pepper Dressing
Avocados stuffed with Crab Meat
B-51 I
Banana Bread II
Banan Pese
Batter for Chicken, Shrimp, Fish
Bayerische Semmelklösse

Beer Marinade for Beef
Bell Pepper Steak
Berry Berry Yummy Pie

Breakfast Bread Pudding

Brochettes a la Camerounaise

Bubble and Squeak
Buddhist 5 Spice Tamales
Buttery-Orange Raisin Cake

Cajun-style Chicken Stew
Calalou Chez Clara Soup
Callaloo Voodoo
Candy or Breakfast Bar
Carrot Pie
Carrots Israeli
Chakhokhbili of Hen
Chicken Creole with Mango

Chocolate Wafers

Coconut Bread

Coconut Candy

Coconut Pudding

Conch Fritters

Conch Fritters Dressing
Conch In Creole Sauce
Conch Soup Haitian-style

Conch Stew
Corn Fritters II
Counch Fritters
Creole Boiled Fish
Crescents Or Croissants

Curry Dressing

Date-Orange Coffee Cake

Dessert Crepes

Eggplant Parmesan
Egg Roll Skins

Egusi Soup I
Festive Citrus Salad

French Doughnuts
French-style Lettuce Salad
