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I have been preparing tropical exotic dishes for my family, friends and co-workers for many years. Through their referrals, I have had the privilege of catering for some of Miami and Miami Beach's movers and shakers. For years, my husband and I have poured our hearts into our successful neighborhood restaurant and catering business, specializing in local, national and international cuisine. It is through the urging of family, friends and customers as well as the many requests for my recipes that I have decided to write this cookbook. My recipes emphasize the exotic and delicious tropical and international fruits, vegetables and spices that give our dishes their unparalleled taste and sensuality. I hope these recipes will excite your taste buds beyond your expectations. Dorette
In Tropical Palate Taste of Jamaica, the author welcomes the reader to her Jamaican kitchen and home. She has been preparing Jamaican dishes for her family, friends, and co-workers for many years. Through their referrals, she has had the privilege of catering for large parties, company picnics, weddings, and intimate gatherings for some of Miami and Miami Beach's movers and shakers. With her husband, they have poured their hearts into a successful neighborhood restaurant specializing in, of course, their fantastic native cuisine. It is from the urging of family, friends, and customers that she decided to write this cookbook.\n\nThe ingredients are easy to find on any local supermarket shelf. They emphasize the exotic and delicious Caribbean fruit, vegetables and spices that give these dishes their unparallel taste and sensuality. I hope these meals and recipes will enhance your taste buds beyond your expectations. Dorette.
Tropical Palate taste of the islands is a compilation of Tantalizing, exotic, recipes from Jamaica and other islands in the Caribbean. I have been preparing tropical exotic meals for my friends, family and co-workers for many years. Through their referrals, my unique style has taken me in different directions such as catering for Miami's elite, to owning restaurants, publishing three cookbooks, Miami Herald mention The Grio top 100 and NBC 6. I hope these recipes will enhance your taste buds beyond your expectations. There is an old saying, you never know how good the milk is until the cow dies. Growing up on a family estate in rural Jamaica, I never realized nor appreciated what it was to have such beauty and abundance growing all around me. I can sit back on the verandah and reminisce about the days of my mother's and grandmother's past. As I look out to where we had so many coffee trees loaded with ripe coffee ready to be picked, I recall how much I hated picking coffee. I could not bear to touch the camouflage lizards that were on the limbs. They used to scare the daylights out of me. I can still hear the sound of my mother's and grandmother's voices shouting "go pick the coffee! go chum the coffee! go parch the coffee!" If the coffee is parched too light, it's not strong enough, parched too dark, you have burnt it! Now it is known as different roasts and flavors. After beating and brewing the coffee, you can have a cup of the best coffee in the world. After all this hard work, you deserve to enjoy such delights as Lewis Property Freeze, Lewis Property Breeze, coffee cakes, ice cream and scones.
This travel guide walks with the adventurous traveler to the heart of Jamaica, to the miles of sand beaches, to the rugged Blue Mountains, to the country villages that provide a peek at the real Jamaica. The authors focus on the adventures this popular Caribbean island has to offer: scuba diving along coral reefs, biking mountain trails, deep sea fishing, parasailing, windsurfing, horseback riding, and other adventures that range from mild to wild. Special sections include a look at Jamaica's Meet the People program, home visits, local nightspots, festivals, and more. Maps and photos enliven the down-to-earth text. [The authors] are known for their attention to details. Chicago Daily Herald. Print edition is 360 pages.
Guyanese food enthusiast and blogger Cynthia Nelson, who lives in Barbados, brings readers over 100 recipes from all over the Caribbean; all of which she has tried and tested herself and served to family and friends. But more than just recipes, Tastes Like Home is a conversation about food and how it connects and forms part of Caribbean identity.
We were enjoying a Jamaican meal at Verney''s Tropical Resort, a small inn perched in the hills over Montego Bay. This was a true Jamaican feast - not a watered-down tourist version - served with real Jamaican hospitality. It''s that opportunity to meet local residents, taste island dishes and retreat from the typical resort experience that brings travelers to the small inns, many in Montego Bay. While this bayside city is home to some of the Caribbean''s most lavish resorts, places where you can lose yourself in all-inclusive luxury and around-the-clock activities, you''ll also find plenty of opportunities to meet local people and learn more about the local culture in this thriving city. Montego Bay is more than just a tourist hub, however; it''s also a real city with a long-standing history. Columbus visited in May 1494 and named Montego Bay El Golfo de Buen Tiempo, or Bay of Good Weather. In 1510 the Spanish started to settle here. Using the bay as a shipping point for hogs, they began to call this site Bahia de Mantega, a name derived from the Spanish word for lard, which was one of the top products. In 1655 the British occupied Jamaica and the parish of St. James was founded soon after. Montego Bay became the capital of the parish and for many years was a tax-free haven. Surrounded by sugarcane plantations, the area became the home of many wealthy English planters. If you know just one Jamaica destination, it is probably Montego Bay, often just Mo Bay. Located on the north coast, this is the capital of the tourism industry and the second-largest community outside of Kingston. For most travelers, this is the starting point - thanks to the Donald Sangster International Airport - as well as the island''s busiest cruise pier. Ocho Rios is the garden center of Jamaica and its lushest area is Dunn''s River Falls. This spectacular waterfall, the top attraction, is a series of falls that cascade from the mountains to the sea. Here, you don''t just view the falls, but actually climb up them. Led by a sure-footed Jamaican guide (who wears everyone''s cameras slung around his neck), groups work their way up the falls hand-in-hand like a human daisy chain. West of Ocho Rios in the town of Oracabessa, 007 fans can visit the James Bond Beach. Located near Ian Fleming''s former home, Goldeneye, the beach has plenty of options for a day of activity: Wave Runners, helicopter tours and horseback rides, as well as a beach bar and grill. The town of Ocho Rios, often known by the nickname Ochi, sits on the north coast. The main road, called the North Coast Highway or A3 along this stretch, slices through the city, following the coastline. (Dunn''s River Falls is on the western side of town.) This entire stretch of road is lined with stony bluffs. Between the hills and the sea there is just enough room for a road and a strip of beach. As you approach the city from the western end, driving from Montego Bay, you''ll first see the cruise ship terminal. From here, you''ll be moving into the town itself. The North Coast Highway becomes DaCosta Drive; off that and parallel runs Main Street, where many of the shops and the crafts market are located. The main road continues east through town toward the large resorts, most of which lie east of the city. This travel guide walks with the adventurous traveler to the heart of Jamaica, to the miles of sand beaches, to the rugged Blue Mountains, to the country villages that provide a peek at the real Jamaica. The authors focus on the adventures this popular Caribbean island has to offer: scuba diving along coral reefs, biking mountain trails, deep sea fishing, parasailing, windsurfing, horseback riding, and other adventures that range from mild to wild. Special sections include a look at Jamaica''s Meet the People program, home visits, local nightspots, festivals, and more. Maps and photos enliven the down-to-earth text.
Spicy, easy to prepare, and full of surprises, Caribbean food is catching the fancy of American palates. In this comprehensive collection of of over 250 recipes, the reader can create exciting meals with a calypso beat.