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Home » Ecuadorian Holiday Food

Ecuadorian Holiday Food

Ecuadorian holiday dishes

Food is a very important part of most holidays in Ecuador. Here are some of the traditional Ecuadorian holiday food dishes:

Easter: Easter is full of traditional recipes in Ecuador. The main meal consists of a soup called fanesca, which contains salt cod and larger variety of grains and vegetables. Fanesca is served with hard boiled eggs and fried cheese empanadas. A mashed potato side dish called molo is served after the fanesca. Dulce de higos or figs cooked in panela syrup are a traditional Easter dessert.

Fanesca: Fanesca is an Ecuadorian soup or stew made only during Easter, it is made with bacalao or salt cod, squash, fava beans, chochos, corn, peas, porotos or fresh beans, rice, onions, garlic, cumin, achiote, peanuts, milk, cream and cheese.

Ecuadorian Fanesca

Dulce de higos: Dulce de higos are fig preserves cooked slowly in a syrup of panela or brown cane sugar and spices.

Empanadas de viento: Empanadas de viento are Ecuadorian empanadas stuffed with cheese and onion, then fried and sprinkled with sugar.

Learn more about Easter in Ecuador

Dia de los Difuntos or Day of the Deceased: Ecuador celebrates the Day of the Deceased with two very traditional dishes, guaguas de pan or bread figures and colada morada, a thick drink made with purple corn flour, berries, other fruits, aromatic herbs and spices.

Guaguas de pan or bread babies: Guaguas de pan are traditional Ecuadorian sweet bread figures, shaped liked babies or dolls, that are part of the Day of the Deceased holiday

Colada Morada: Colada morada is a traditional Ecuadorian drink made with fruits, spices, and purple corn flour.

Colada morada or Ecuadorian spiced purple corn drink

Christmas & New Year’s: Christmas always involves a lot of food preparation, since families gather together it is common to prepare dishes that require a lot of work, since there are many hand to help prepare the meal (and many mouths to eat it). There is usually a large dinner on Christmas Eve and turkey is a traditional dish for this meal. Hornado de chancho or roasted pork leg is another popular Ecuadorian dish that many families prepare during this season. Pernil or roasted pork loin is also made for Christmas or New Year’s meals. Since the nights are cold, mainly in the highlands, most people drink a hot cinnamon drink called canelazo to say warm.

Pavo horneado: Roasted turkey is a must have for Christmas dinner in Ecuador.

Hornado de chancho: Ecuadorian recipe for roasted pork leg marinated with garlic and beer

Ecuadorian roasted pork leg or hornado de chancho ecuatoriano

Pernil lojano: Pernil is a roasted pork loin dish where the pork is marinated in a sauce of bitter orange juice, onion, garlic, achiote, cloves, cinnamon, cumin and panela and slow roasted in the oven for several hours.

Canelazo and Naranjillazo: Canelazo is warm spiced cinnamon cocktail made with cinnamon, water, sugar and aguardiente. Naranjillazo is similar to canelazo, but is made with naranjilla or lulo juice.

Learn more about New Year’s Traditions in Ecuador

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. taylor alvarado says

    November 5, 2019 at 7:08 pm

    I love all your recipes. I’m married to an Ecuadorian and we don’t get to visit Ecuador as much as we would like. We live in Hawaii where there’s really nothing that resembles South American food other then Mexican food ( as close as your going to get lol) thanks to you I have been able to make some of my husbands favorite dishes!!!

    Reply
  2. Rachel Haag says

    August 31, 2014 at 5:47 pm

    I want to thank you for this website. I’m Caucasian married to an Ecuadorian who was born and raised there. Thanks to you I have been able to make tons of Ecuadorian dishes for my husband, our kids, and my in laws. Even my mother in law was impressed with my chaulafan. It is a joy cooking for them now that I can easily cook a typical dish. So thank you SO much for the website. Thanks to you, I enjoy cooking again!
    All the best!

    Reply
  3. Veronica Lopez says

    April 10, 2014 at 8:48 am

    Hello, by any chance do you have a recipe you can give me for the Fanesca? I would very much like to surprise my husband and his family by making it. My MIL has been very good about giving me recipes and showing me how to make Ecuadorian dishes, but I would love to surprise them.
    Thank you!

    Reply
    • Layla Pujol says

      April 11, 2014 at 12:45 pm

      Of course, the recipe is here: https://www.laylita.com/recipes/2008/03/17/fanesca/

      Reply
  4. lilita says

    September 1, 2013 at 5:06 pm

    Thank you so much for these recipes. My grandmother, mi mamita, would make all these delicious dishes while i was growing up. When i would ask for a recipe, she would always say, come learn…. well i have learned a choice few! She is now too old she claims to even try to make anything anymore and the ingredients escape her memory. It is a special gift for me to make her something from all your recipes. Her memory quickly returns at that time and she promptly teaches me how to make it, according to her, “the right way”! I enjoy these times with her and it is amusing how only her way is “the right way”. Quickly takes me back to my childhood when her and her sisters would cook together…..each making their personal contrbution to what they would argue to be “the right way”. Every one of them had an explanation linked back to “my country” much the way you do in yours.. thanks again. Viva mi Mamita and viva Ecuador!
    ~LILITA

    Reply

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Welcome

 Layla Pujol is an Ecuadorian modern-day nomad who loves to cook and travel. She lives in Seattle and is currently working on her first cookbook, which will focus on delicious Ecuadorian and Latin recipes (adapted to her style). More

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