Our Recipes
Explore dishes from Peru's three culinary worlds — coastal, highland, and jungle.
38 recipes
No recipes found matching your criteria: 17

Classic Ceviche
Peru's iconic dish of fresh sea bass cured in lime juice, served with red onion, chili peppers, and sweet potato. A refreshing coastal classic.

Lomo Saltado
A beloved Peruvian stir-fry that blends Chinese and Peruvian cuisines. Tender beef strips wok-tossed with onions, tomatoes, and soy sauce, served over french fries and rice.

Suspiro Limeño
A heavenly dessert from Lima meaning 'sigh of a woman from Lima.' A rich dulce de leche base topped with a cloud of port wine meringue.

Pisco Sour
Peru's national cocktail. A frothy and tangy blend of pisco brandy, fresh lime juice, simple syrup, egg white, and aromatic bitters.

Ají de Gallina
One of Peru's most beloved comfort foods. Tender shredded chicken in a rich, creamy sauce made from ají amarillo peppers, bread, walnuts, and Parmesan cheese, served over white rice.

Causa Limeña
A stunning layered terrine of seasoned mashed yellow potato filled with a savory tuna or chicken salad. Bright with ají amarillo and lime, served cold and garnished with avocado and egg.

Arroz con Leche
Peru's beloved rice pudding, made extra creamy with both condensed and evaporated milk, perfumed with cinnamon and cloves. Served warm or cold, generously dusted with cinnamon.

Mazamorra Morada
A vibrant purple corn pudding made with dried fruits, pineapple, and warm spices, thickened with sweet potato starch. The classic partner to arroz con leche, served at every Peruvian celebration.

Tiradito
Peru's elegant answer to sashimi. Paper-thin slices of raw fish dressed in a bright ají amarillo and lime sauce. Born from the meeting of Japanese and Peruvian culinary traditions — Nikkei cuisine at its finest.

Tacu Tacu
The art of Peruvian leftovers. Day-old rice and beans pan-fried into a golden, crispy cake — a beloved Lima staple that transforms humble ingredients into something irresistible. Often topped with a fried egg or steak.

Turrón de Doña Pepa
A towering, colorful dessert made for Lima's October procession of the Señor de los Milagros. Layers of anise-scented cookie sticks drenched in dark chancaca syrup and showered with rainbow sprinkles.

Pollo a la Brasa
Peru's most eaten dish — and it's not even close. Whole chicken marinated in a dark, aromatic blend of soy sauce, beer, garlic, cumin, and paprika, then spit-roasted until the skin shatters and the meat falls off the bone. Served with crispy fries and a dozen sauces.

Arroz con Mariscos
Peru's beloved seafood rice — a vibrant, flavor-packed dish where rice is cooked in a rich aji amarillo and tomato broth with shrimp, squid, mussels, and octopus. A coastal feast in every bite.

Parihuela
A rich, fiery Peruvian seafood soup loaded with fish, shrimp, crab, and mussels in a bold aji panca and tomato broth. Often called 'the breakfast of champions' and beloved as a hangover cure along the coast.

Leche de Tigre
The electrifying citrus-chili marinade from ceviche, elevated to a dish of its own. This creamy, spicy 'tiger's milk' is packed with fresh fish, shrimp, and crunchy corn — Peru's ultimate appetizer and legendary pick-me-up.

Sudado de Pescado
A comforting Peruvian fish stew where thick fillets are gently braised in a fragrant tomato, onion, and aji amarillo broth. Simple, soulful, and deeply satisfying — this is home cooking at its finest along the Peruvian coast.

Tacu Tacu a lo Macho
The ultimate Peruvian surf combo — a golden, crispy pan-fried cake of rice and beans topped with a rich, spicy seafood sauce brimming with shrimp, squid, octopus, and mussels. Bold, hearty, and unforgettable.