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Spiced pineapple drink {Chicha de piña}

Recipe for Ecuadorian chicha de piña, a spiced pineapple drink made by simmering the pineapple skins and core with hard brown sugar (panela or piloncillo) and spices.

Pineapple chicha drink

En español

This spiced pineaple drink, called chicha de piña in Ecuador, is a delicious way to use the leftover pineapple skins and core. I’ve been working on some pineapple recipes lately (recipes coming soon). One of my favorite parts of cooking with pineapple or just eating a pineapple is using the pineapple skins and the core – which most people usually throw away – and boiling them with water, panela and spices to make pineapple chicha or a spiced pineapple drink.

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Chicha de piña or spiced pineapple drink

Traditional chicha is a fermented drink that is typically made from corn, sometimes also from yuca or cassava root, rice, oats, among others, but there are other lighter and easier to make versions of chicha.

My mom would make this drink for us whenever we had a pineapple, we loved it and would drink it pretty quickly. Which meant it never really got to the true fermentation point, and while most traditional chichas are fermented. You can easily distinguish that acidity and kick that the fermentation adds to the drink. There are a lot of drinks in Ecuador that we call chicha but are much lighter versions that are freshly made and not fermented at all or just barely fermented.

Spiced pineapple drink or pineapple chicha

The true traditional chicha was made by chewing the corn and then spitting it back into a clay pot, spices and panela are also added. As a kid (ok and as an adult too) I thought that was just gross. The chicha drinks in Ecuador are not made this way anymore, unless it’s a specifi tribal ceremony. The modern method is to grind the dried corn kernels with a rock (a somewhat primitive mortar and pestle).

Panela, piloncillo, chancaca or raspadura

This pineapple drink is sweetened with a hard brown cane sugar called panela, also known as piloncillo. It comes in a brick or cone shape and can be found in most Latin grocery stores or even in certain mainstream grocery stores. Panela is made directly from sugar cane juice, most of the panela you find in the US imported from Colombia and is probably produced in a more industrial setting.

However in the town where I grew up in Ecuador the process is it a little bit more old-fashioned, the panela is prepared in trapiches, which are a very rustic processing area. There were a few trapiches close to our farm, where we had a small field of sugar cane and when ready to harvest, the canes were cut with machetes (the bases are left and grow back), then the sugar cane was loaded unto donkeys – which were wearing these special wood devices to carry the sugar cane-, next the sugar cane was taken to the nearest trapiche, where it first goes through a press that squeezes the juice out.

The juice, which is called guarapo and is delicious mixed with bitter orange juice, is then cooked in these large rectangular metal devices (that have fires going underneath) and stirred with these huge wooden spoons (that almost look like kayaking paddles), it goes through several different of these cooking stages until at the end you have a very thick syrup, which is then poured into small brick shape wood molds, once the panela dries it hardens and the molds are removed.

It is a very interesting process and just the trapiche part takes about an entire day, and of course as a kid it was great fun to drink some guarapo and taste the cane juice syrup. In Ecuador we use panela as most people would use sugar: to sweeten coffee, tea, juice, to bake and to make marmalades or fruit preserves; the panelas are kept in their hard brick form until ready to use and then they are melted down with water to make a syrup called miel de panela (panela honey) which is used to sweeten things, or it is also grated when used in certain dishes or for baking.

How to use pineapple skins and core to make a delicious spiced drink

My recipe for chicha de piña does not cause the drink to ferment, though you can keep it for several days in the fridge, with the skins and spices in the drink, and it just gets better and better. If you do want it to ferment a little you can prepare the chicha by only boiling half of the pineapple skins with the panela and the spices, then mix this with the remaining raw pineapple skins and core, let it sit covered at room temperature (assuming room temperature is about 60 F) for day, and don’t refrigerate until it starts to ferment (obviously if it starts to rot or mold you shouldn’t drink it).

Most of the time this pineapple chicha is served chilled – very refreshing on a warm day – but I also love to drink it hot, especially on a cold day, it’s almost like a variation of spiced apple cider. In fact, as far as spices go you can use a similar mix to what you would use to make spiced cider or mulled wine (a good way to use those spices up if you still have any leftover from winter), you’re entire house will smell so good when you are making this drink! You can strain it if you are drinking it immediately or leave some of the skins and spices in the drink.

Spiced pineapple drink {Chicha de piña}

Chicha de piña is a spiced pineapple drink made by simmering the pineapple skins and core with hard brown sugar and spices.
4.90 from 84 votes
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Course: Drinks
Cuisine: Ecuadorian, Latin American
Keyword: Chicha, Pineapple
Prep Time: 15 minutes
Cook Time: 1 hour
Servings: 2 liters

Ingredients

  • The skins and core of 1 pineapple organic if possible and well washed
  • ½ to ¾ lb of panela piloncillo or brown sugar, whole or in chunks – more or less to taste
  • Assorted spices: cinnamon sticks all spice peppers, cloves, anise, etc
  • 10-12 cups of water

Instructions

  • Combine all of the ingredients in large saucepan or pot
  • Bring to a boil and simmer partially covered for at about an hour, stirring occasionally.
  • Let cool down, unless you are drinking it warm or hot, you can drink it immediately or let it rest refrigerated to allow the spices and pineapple flavor to concentrate.

Notes

If you want to make the fermented version of chicha de piña, prepare the chicha by only boiling half of the pineapple skins with the panela and the spices, then mix this with the remaining raw pineapple skins and core. Let it rest – covered and in a clay pot if you have one – at room temperature (in a cool place) for a day or two or until it starts to ferment, then strain and refrigerate.

Step by step preparation photos for pineapple chicha or fermented pineapple skin drink

Chicha de pina or spice pineapple drink
Spiced pineapple chicha

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27 Comments

  1. in this country people just throw away skin off of most of the fruit, but this is a reminder that skin and “guts” have a lot to offer. We will be in Mexico all winter so I will try an make this drink there, fermentation will happen faster there than here in Seattle…. thanks for sharing!

  2. “I’ve heard of colada or quaker being made with the pineapple skins but I haven’t ever tasted it”… really???
    Next time you and I are in Ecuador I will ask my mom to make for you… quaker or any kind of colada with pine apple or with naranjilla or with both is delicious!!!

    Hi Iva – I’ve had the colada with naranjilla, my mom used to make it all time (I even make here sometimes) – but I would love to try your mom’s colada! We need to coordinate for the next trip to Ecuador ;)

  3. Sounds really yummy! Amazing how many similarities food and cultures across the world have. We use a similar sugar, gud in India and have substituted panela when we could not find it out here. This drink is also very similar to a mango drink I grew up drinking in summer (and yes they did not let any part of it go to waste! :) I plan to post it if I can find the right kind of mangoes soon!

  4. Hi Melissa, as a kid I always wanted to eat the core, but my mom wouldn’t let me, she said it would make my stomach hurt, regardless I would eat still eat some of it and even now I still do, the core is also really good to eat when you’re done making this drink, it has all of the flavor of the cinnamon and other spices.

  5. It shocked me to find out that people throw away the core! When I was growing up and my mom cut up a fresh pineapple, we’d all fight over the core and it’d be the first part to get eaten. I just love the crunchy texture of it, and the more subtle sweetness. And now that I’m in my own home, I get ALL the core to myself! :)

    Try crunching on a bit of the core next time you get a pineapple (we eat it in long, triangular sticks like in the second photo)!

  6. Paulj- I just realized that the cookbook you mentioned is actually in Spanish and also that my mom has it (and it is on my list of things to “borrow” next time I go to Ecuador!

  7. i always feel terrible throwing so much of the pineapple away, especially since i don’t have a composter and it just goes into the garbage. but i will feel guilty no more thanks to this recipe!

  8. Hi Paulj – I’ve heard of colada or quaker being made with the pineapple skins but I haven’t ever tasted it, I make the oatmeal colada (recipe and photos coming soon) with a fruit called naranajilla or lulo. I’ll have to try to find the cookbook you mention, it’s almost impossible to find Ecuadorian cookbooks (in English).

  9. The cookbook by Michelle O. Fried (Comidas del Ecuador) has a recipe for ‘Quaker’ that is essentially this pineapple drink plus rolled oats.

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