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Aguacate

What is an arepa?

A round bread made from corn flour, by hand. Crispy outside, soft inside.

A freshly made arepa, split open and filled

What it is

Three ingredients: precooked corn flour, water, salt. A dough that comes together in the hand. A flat, round disc that turns golden brown on a hot griddle. Crispy outside, soft and warm inside. Naturally gluten-free. In Venezuela it sits on the table at any time of day. It is not a side dish, it is the bread that carries everything.

Where it comes from

The arepa is old. Older than the country it now calls home. More than two thousand eight hundred years ago, the Cumanagoto, an indigenous people on Venezuela's eastern Caribbean coast, were already making them. Their word for it was erepa, roughly translated as “that which sustains life” or “corn bread”.

The traces of this tradition reach into what is today Bolívar state, on the banks of the Orinoco. Whoever grows up there learns early how to shape an arepa.

How it's made

The recipe is as simple as it gets: mix corn flour with water and salt, knead until the dough is smooth and elastic. Form small discs, about the size of a palm, and lay them on a hot griddle. In Venezuela this griddle is traditionally a budare, a flat cast-iron pan that has outlived generations in many homes.

At our place on Mohsgasse, the arepas are made fresh every day. No frozen stock, no overnight production. The dough comes together in the kitchen just before it's needed.

How to eat it

An arepa is sliced open in the middle, like a roll, and filled with whatever suits the time of day and the mood. Cheese for breakfast. Shredded beef with black beans and plantain for lunch. Chicken with avocado, when the classic Reina Pepiada is on the table. Beans and rice if the meal is vegetarian.

It is breakfast, lunch, dinner, a snack in between. In Venezuela it is called the queen of the Venezuelan table, and that is not a poetic exaggeration. It is simply what it is.

In Vienna, at Aguacate

What began as Vienna's first arepera is today a Venezuelan kitchen that reaches far beyond.

The arepa remains the anchor. If you'd like to try one, come by. Freshly made, split in the hand, filled with whatever you feel like.

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