Page Index YOUR AD
Transcription
Page Index YOUR AD
A Cultural Publication for Puerto Ricans From the editor . . . YOUR AD “Que bonita bandera, que bonita bandera, que bonita bandera es la bandera Puertorriqueña.” FITS HERE Keep your eyes on the Puerto Rico team this month! This is a photo of the Olympic Village in London. Puerto Rico made their Olympic debut at the London 1948 Games. A nine-man team took part in Athletics, Boxing and Shooting. Their first Olympic medalist was boxer Juan Evangelista Venegas, who took bronze in the men's bantamweight. All Puerto Rico's medals have come in boxing. Orlando Maldonado was only 17 when he took bronze in the light flyweight division at the 1976 Games in Montreal. The best result achieved by a Puerto Rican was Luis Ortíz Flores’ silver in the lightweight division at the 1984 Games in Los Angeles. Fencer Gloria COLON MUNOZ was their first female Olympian when she competed at the Rome 1960 Games. Puerto Rico sent a team of 31 in eight sports to the Beijing 2008 Games. Index Credits 2 Puerto Rican Poet 2 Visit Puerto Rico/Trivia, Refranes 3 Taínos - Calendar - Don Guillo 4 Diego el Tavernero/ Poemas Riqueños 5 Primos/Cuba 6 Food Blog with Vélez and Jaime 7 Nuestra Cocina Criolla 8 Good Luck Team, we’re behind you all the way! Siempre Boricua, Ivonne Figueroa Page More recipes 9 Lengua Boricua/Book Review 10 Music Reviews by: Alberto González 10 AUGUST 2012 AUGUST 2012 EL BORICUA PAGE 2 CREDITS Puerto Rican, José Ferrer, one of the nation’s foremost and honored actors, has been immortalized on a First-Class Forever Stamp in 2012 as the 14th luminary celebrated in the U.S. Postal Service’s Distinguished Americans series. Considered one of the most accomplished talents of his generation, Ferrer (1912-1992) won several Tony Awards for his work on stage and performed in more than 60 movies, garnering three Academy Award nominations. He received a Best Actor Oscar for his role as Cyrano de Bergerac. “The Postal Service is proud to honor José Ferrer on a Forever Stamp,” said Stephen Kearney, manager, Stamp Services. “A renaissance man who spoke five languages fluently, Ferrer's accomplishments extended to many areas of entertainment.” ©1995-2012 All articles and photos are the property of of the writer or photographer. Staff Ivonne Figueroa Executive Editor & Gen. Mgr. Javier Figueroa Publisher Anna María Vélez de Blas, Chef Recipe Tester and Writer Jaime Garibay Rivera, PhD Jaime in the Kitchen, Food Blog Guillermo ‘Don Guillo’ Andares, PhD Gardening Tips for Puerto Ricans The portrait featured on the stamp is an oil painting by Daniel Adel of Cold Spring, NY, based on a photograph of Ferrer. Adel worked under the direction of art director Antonio Alcalá of Alexandria, VA. Alberto González Music Reviews Elena Cintrón Colón Born in Santurce, Puerto Rico, a district of San Juan, Ferrer’s father, an attorney, moved the family to New York City when Ferrer was six years old. Always an excellent student, he passed the Princeton University entrance exam at age 15, but was considered too young to attend and spent a year in a boarding school, Le Rosey, in Switzerland. He entered Princeton at age 16 and graduated with the class of 1933. He conducted postgraduate work at Columbia University with the intention of becoming a teacher of languages. However, he had discovered his love of acting while in college, and in 1935, made his first appearance on Broadway. Primos Editor Diego Matos Dupree Tavernero Joe Román Santos Travel Editor Lisa Santiago Brochu, Chef Restaurant Reviews Luisa Yaliz Alaniz Cintrón, MD Guest Writer Support Staff Fernando Alemán Jr - Web Consultant José Rubén de Castro -Photo Editor María Yisel Mateo Ortiz -Development Special Thanks to . . . Tayna Miranda Zayas of MarkNetGroup.com EL BORICUA is a monthly cultural publication, established in 1995, that is Puerto Rican owned and operated. We are NOT sponsored by any club or organization. Our goal is to present and promote our "treasure" which is our Cultural Identity - “the Puerto Rican experience.” EL BORICUA is presented in English and is dedicated to the descendants of Puerto Ricans wherever they may be. There are three Puerto Rico's you need to learn about; the old, the new and the natural. Learn about our little terruño. Subscribe to EL BORICUA, a monthly cultural publication for Puerto Ricans. http://www.elboricua.com/subscribenow.html AUGUST 2012 EL BORICUA PAGE 3 Founded in 1512, the town of San Germán is the second oldest settlement outside of San Juan in Puerto Rico. The town's area is 53sq.mi/140sq.km and the population is 34,962. The surrounding areas produce coffee, fruits, sugar and tobacco. Unlike other West Coast regions that are primarily beach towns, San Germán offers a historic district including cathedrals, plazas, and colonial homes. San Germán is also home to a university campus and much of the restaurants and nightlife are catered to students, college-age travelers and the young at heart. Consequently the town has a very lively atmosphere. Nature and Adventure Joe Roman Santos, Editor Every time I swing to the west coast of Puerto Rico I have to stop in San German. I love the quaintness of this small village and I have to stop and climb up the front steps of Porta Coeli. When growing up in PR my parents often took us for a drive after church on Sundays. We ate from street vendors, stopped at the beach often and very once in a while we ended up here. Everyone got out of the car and ran up the steps counting - trece, catorce, quince, etc. After we had our fun, we ended up at one of the plazas eating piraguas. Dominican friars built the Convento de Porta Coeli in 1609 at the crest of a hill in what is now San Germán. During the 18th century the Convento was reconstructed and a church built next to it. The single nave church was constructed of rubble masonry with stucco-surfaced walls and a dramatic wood truss roof. Today, only ruins--a gable-end wall and belfry attached to the church--remain of the old Convento. Restored in 1960, the Convento de Porta Coeli now houses a Religious Art Museum. Speaking Puerto Rican . . . Mi madre me enseño sobre mis raices 'Mal agradecido, cuando yo era chiquita no tenía nada de eso!' Refrán . . . Mañana será otro día. Sangermeño, PFC Joseph (Jose) R. Martinez destroyed a German Infantry unit and tank in Tuniz, during World War II, by providing heavy artillery fire, saving his platoon from being attacked in the process. He was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross, second only to the Medal of Honor, by General George S. Patton, thus becoming the first Puerto Rican recipient of said military decoration. http://www.elboricua.com/CCNOW_Calderos.html BORICUA . . . Joe is a school teacher in Houston and spends most of his holidays and summers in Puerto Rico. is a powerful word. It is our history, it is our cultural affirmation, it is a declaration, it is a term of endearment, it is poetic . . . . . . . . . it is us. AUGUST 2012 EL BORICUA PAGE 4 August 8, 1948 August 8, 1505 August 13, 1889 U.S. grants Puerto Ricans the right to elect own Governor. Taínos were experts at basketry, a term that refers to woven textiles created manually without a frame or loom. Rigid and semi-rigid containers, matting, bags, fish traps or nets, hats, and cradles manufactured in this manner are considered forms of basketry. Fibers for baskets were obtained from different plants: cotton, bihao (palm), maguey (Agave sp.), and maranta that were processed by splitting the leaf, frond, or stalk down the middle or stripping the outer surface. Baskets were made in different shapes and sizes depending on the intended use. Most were decorated with fancy patterns and paint; some more highly decorated were used in rituals. Others were simple for everyday use. Some baskets were tightly woven and double-walled to rendered the basket waterproof – these used maranta plant material. All had particular designs in the weave associated with the region and the basket-maker. A heavy basket was carried on the head, a very heavy basket was carried hanging from a pole. Everything was used and nothing was discarded, torn baskets were repaired and put to good use. Ponce de León founds Caparra, Puerto Rico. b. Lidio Cruz Monclova, lawyer, educator, and historian is born. His works include La Gran Historia de Puerto Rico. August b. Roberto Clemente, Major League baseball 15, 1934 player, and humanitarian is born in Carolina. He died in 1972 while attempting to aid victims of a disaster. August b. Herman Badillo, Caguas born 21, 1929 Bronx politician. Became the first native born Boricua to serve in Congress, 1971-77 August b. Mercedes Negrón Muñoz (aka Clara Lair) poet 26 was born to a family of poets and writers. Niece of Luis Muños Rivera and José A. Negrón. Her poetry won awards from the Instituto de Literatura Puertorriqueña. August Sixto Escobar wins World Bantamweight Boxing 31, 1936 Championship. Baskets were used for storage and for carrying supplies from one place to another. They were taken in canoas to carry supplies, food, and the day’s catch. Women used them for in harvest. Some were used for meal preparation and serving meals. They were used much like we use them today. Other baskets were filled with ancestor bones and stored in dwellings high above bohíos, hanging from the ceiling. Don Guillo, the gardener . . . . Maranta, native to the Caribbean, was used by Taínos to make waterproof baskets using the plant’s underground rhizomes or tubers. This is an easy to grow houseplant and is found in most nurseries. http://www.saveasato.org Hi! My name is Paco Vega. I used to live under a bridge in Fajardo, now I have live in a dream home. I have two brothers and two sisters. Mom and Dad love me. I have other friends in PR that also need to find a home. http://www.saveasato.org AUGUST 2012 EL BORICUA PAGE 5 Poemas Riqueños Puerto Rico patria de mis amores jardín de flores sólo pienso en ti Puerto Rico, de bellos palmares, tus dulces cantares viven en mí. Puerto Rico, isla primorosa, isla preciosa donde yo nací, en tu suelo vi la luz del cielo y entre tus palmas quiero morir. Leopoldo González Bul del Campo (bul is punch) Spend time with your kids, they are not going to raise themselves. Make their breakfast and sit with them to eat it. Eat dinner at the table, not in front of the TV. Luisa Yaliz Alaniz Cintrón, MD Child Psychiatrist & Behavioral Expert with family roots in Ponce. Use mealtime for fun or constructive conversations, not to correct or accuse. Talk about future vacations or something interesting you heard. Discussing politics is good – get your kids thinking about right and wrong, talk about which candidates you prefer and why, which policies are good and why. Talk about cars, what you like and why, movies you want to watch, etc. Talk about the future or talk about the past. Talk about family history, that gets children interested in their roots. Does your child look like his great aunt? He or she would be interested in this. Meal time conversation make good memories and influence our kids in a better way than any TV show could. 1½ cups rum 1/3 cup banana liqueur 1 dash grenadine syrup 1 (6 ounce) can frozen orange juice concentrate 1 (6 ounce) can frozen pineapple juice concentrate 1 orange, sliced into rounds 4 Key limes, sliced into rounds 1 lemon, sliced into rounds In a large punch bowl, prepare the orange and pineapple juice according to package directions. Stir in the rum, banana liqueur and Grenadine. Float slices of orange, lime and lemon on top. * Diego Matos Dupree, born in Bayamón, is a bartender (tavernero) for a popular cruise line. He lives on board most of the year and gets to travel the world. AUGUST 2012 EL BORICUA PAGE 6 Our PRIMOS section journeys through Latin America celebrating our cousins. Elena Cintrón Colón Primos Editor * Elena, born and raised in Puerto Rico to Brazilian and Peruvian parents, lives in Buenos Aires most of the year. She works for a large South American firm and travels throughout Latin America. She comes home to San Juan. Paletas de fruta Ecuador is a very warm place and people do what they must just to stay cool. One of my favorite Ecuadorian foods are helados de palo or paletas (homemade pop sickle sticks). Every corner store has these. They are usually made of fruit juices, vanilla flavored milk, chocolate, coconut milk, strawberry gelatin, etc. My favorite is the fruit salad paleta. Fruit Salad Paletas 10 oranges, juiced, about 4 ½ cups of juice 1 large papaya, peeled, seeded and diced small 1 pineapple, peeled, cored and diced small 6 bananas, peeled and diced small Sugar or honey to taste, adjust based on sweetness of fruit Combine all ingredients in a large bowl. Fill the tin molds or popsicle molds with the fruit salad mix and place in the freezer for 3-4 hours or until frozen. This makes about 15 paletas. Add or substitute with any other fruit. Off the Guamote-Macas road about 90 km (56 mi) from the city of Riobamba, the beautiful Lagunas de Atillo are found situated within Sangay National Park. The park is located in the páramo, or upper Andean moorlands, of the Cebadas area of the Guamote region of Ecuador, and it is a site of extreme natural beauty and ecological and biological diversity. In fact, around 3000 species of plants, trees and shrubs have been identified within the park. Sangay National Park has become more accessible over time with more transportation options and new roads, but it still remains a lessfrequented, remote area of Ecuador. AUGUST 2012 EL BORICUA PAGE 7 Jaime in the Kitchen A Food Blog Cocina Criolla – Cooking Hints By: Anna María Vélez de Blas Lerenes grown in the Caribbean and are also known as Sweet Cornroot and Guinea Arrowroot. A native food since the days of the Taínos, these small egg shaped potato looking vegetables are eaten cooked and their texture remains crisp even after long cooking. Strangely enough this vegetable (although it is easy to grow and has few pests) is not used regularly in modern Puerto Rican cooking and is actually in danger of becoming extinct due to the lack of commercial exploitation which in turn has resulted in a decrease in cultivation by traditional farmers. Traditionally these plants would be found growing in the shade of Puerto Rico's coffee plantations. So if you can get your hands on some try the favorite island way of eating them, simply boiled in salted water. Yum! Ya me conocen ustedes, you know me already. So you know I like to cook delicious and easy to prepare Puerto Rican food. You also know Mami in Mayagüez helps me out with recipes, but this one I came up with all by myself. I had to call her to tell her all about it. There’s really no recipe, just the choice was good. For great Tapas, grill morcillas and sausages with small onions and peppers. After grilling, let the sausages cook for a few minutes then slice into bite size servings. The aroma of the grilling sausages and morcillas will bring even the not so hungry guests to the grill. ‘What ya cooking there?’ These Tapas are easy, affordable and impressive! Morcilla in English is known as Black Sausage or Blood Sausage. Black sausage is eaten in Europe, not really eaten much in the USA. Lerenes Appetizer/Tapas 1 lb lerenes 6 cups water 2 tbs salt Boil lerenes in salted water for about 1 hour. Drain and serve, as is, to be peeled before eating. *Anna is a Recipe Tester for EL BORICUA and is also a professional Chef, she lives in California with her husband, Joe and their three children. Hasta la proxima. Jaime Garibay Rivera * Jaime Garibay Rivera, Ph.D. is a retired college professor (Aerophysics), now living in Miami. He has three children and his family roots are in Mayagüez. AUGUST 2012 EL BORICUA PAGE 8 Nuestra Cocina Criolla Cremita de Farina Breakfast cereal served in Puerto Rico 2 cups whole milk ½ cup Farina 2 tbs sugar ⅛ tsp salt 1 tsp butter or margarine In a medium sized saucepan combine all ingredients and cook over medium heat stirring constantly until the mixture begins to boil. Lower heat and continue cooking until it thickens to your liking. You can add cinnamon and stir and add more butter and some maple syrup if you like. Some people add sweetened crema de coco. If you will be adding other liquids, then cook the Farina longer until it gets thicker and then add additional ingredients and stir. Ensalada Caribeña de Mariscos Caribbean Seafood Salad 1½ tbsp. lemon juice 1 tbsp. olive oil 2 c. elbow macaroni, cooked ½ c. shrimp (cooked) ½ c. diced crab meat (cooked) ½ c. diced lobster meat (cooked) 2 hard boiled eggs, chopped 2 tbsp. green pepper, chopped 2 tbsp. roasted red peppers, chopped 2 tbsp. onion, chopped ½ c. celery, chopped ½ c. tomato, chopped ¼ c. stuffed olives, chopped 1 tsp. salt 1 tsp. coarse black pepper ½ c. salad dressing or Mayo Mix lemon juice, olive oil and combine with pasta. Chill several hours, stirring occasionally. Fold in Mayo or dressing and the rest of the ingredients. At this time you can serve or chill for later. Arrange on crisp salad greens. Serves 4 to 6. AUGUST 2012 EL BORICUA PAGE 9 Nuestra Cocina Criolla 2 pounds honeycomb tripe 4 cups lemon juice 8 cups cold water 3 quarts cold water add 1 tablespoon salt 2 tablespoon achiote oil ¼ pound smoked ham, diced ½ cup basic Recaito 1 cup tomato sauce 1 cup alcaparrado ½ pound yautia ½ pound yuca 3 carrots ½ pound West Indian pumpkin 1 green plantain 4 bay leaves ½ tsp salt ½ tsp black pepper 1 can garbanzo beans, drained Mondongo Criollo First prepare the tripe by washing it and removing excess fat (the store will say it has already been cleaned, but please wash it again), then soak in the 8 cups water with lemon for 30 minutes and rinse. At this point you may precook the tripe in pressure cooker for about 20 minutes or overnight in crockpot (low temperature) using 3 quarts cold salted water. Slice with kitchen scissors or chop. Or the tripe can be added to a large pot with the 3 quarts of salted water and brought to a boil, lower the heat, cover, and simmer for about 2½ hours until the tripe is tender, drain and rinse the tripe. All the vegetables need to be prepped by cleaning, peeling, seeding, dicing or slicing, etc. In a clean pot, heat the oil, add ham, recaito, tomato sauce, and alcaparrado; sauté over medium heat for about 5 minutes. Add the tripe, root vegetables, plantain, bay leaves, and enough cold water to cover. Add pepper and salt. Bring to a boil then reduce the heat and simmer for about 40 minutes or until the root vegetables are cooked. Add drained garbanzos and continue to cook the stew for another 5 minutes. This delicious stew is very often served with plain white rice and slices of avocado. This is a truly a Puerto Rican dish. Gaspacho as we know it in the states is a Spanish soup. In Puerto Rico we made it into a delicious salad (ensalada de aguacate con bacalao). ½ lbs bacalao filet, desalted and shredded by hand 2 avocados, chopped 2 tomatoes, chopped ½ onion, sliced (or more to your liking) 2 tbs olive oil ½ tp salt black pepper to taste Mix these ingredients together to form a salad. Our Gazpacho is usually served as a side dish next to rice and a meat dish. I like to serve it over spinach leaves for lunch. Gazpacho Salad Process the bacalao to desalt it. We are all familiar with this, soak, boil, change the water, boil again. It must be shredded by hand, never use an electric appliance for this or the bacalao becomes a matty-mess that needs to be discarded. AUGUST 2012 EL BORICUA PAGE 10 Nuestra Música Andy Montañez “De Andy Montañez al Combo” (2010) Animal Jamboree Latino Folktales By: Judith Ortiz Cofer This book is a collection of four delightfully entertaining short stories for children. The book in written in English on one side, turn it over and it’s in Spanish! The English side includes words in the Puerto Rican vernacular. The lively characters in the stories are lifelike and sharp as nails. Y colorín, colorado, este cuento se ha acabado. Absolutely recommended reading. Judith Ortíz Cofer in an accomplished novelist and poet who incorporates her Puerto Rican experience into her many works. Arte Público Press/Piñata Books is the Nation’s largest and most established publisher of contemporary and recovered literature by U.S. Hispanic authors. It is based at the University of Houston in Texas. Pub Date: April 30th, 2012 ISBN: 978-1-55885-743-8 Page count: 96pp Publisher: Piñata Books/Arté Público This singer from the community of Tras Talleres, in Santurce, P.R., just celebrated his 50 years in music with a tribute concert last month (July) in the “Coliseo de Puerto Rico – José Miguel Agrelot”. Unfortunately, the concert had to be postponed due to a serious car accident in which Andy Montañez was involved a couple of months earlier in Colombia, where he had some artistic commitments. After a successful recovery, the also known as “El Ñiño de Tras Talleres” had the chance to perform for his beloved Puerto Rican fans in a presentation that counted with special and well experienced guests like Puerto Rico’s first voice Danny Rivera and the Dominican legend Johnny Ventura, among others. Andy found his musical cradle in the notorious “El Gran Combo de P.R.”, in which participated for around 15 years as a lead singer along with Pellín Rodríguez, basically from the beginning of this group in the early 1960s, recording countless hits from bolero and “jala-jala” to “guaguancó” and Christmas songs. In the late 1970s joined the Venezuelan group “Dimensión Latina” for a few years, before continuing his career by his own. Due to his participation with this Venezuelan band and the international impact of “El Gran Combo”, especially in Panama, Venezuela and Colombia, Andy has always been acclaimed in that region. Here is his tribute to the group that exposed and promoted him as a popular singer, “El Gran Combo”. “De Andy Montañez al Combo” starts with a new song, “Tributo al Gran Combo”, and follows with new versions of EGC hits originally recorded by Andy’s successor singers Charlie Aponte and Jerry Rivas, like “El menú”, “Timbalero”, “Brujería”, and ends with Andy’s own big hit during his era with EGC, “Julia”, also a new version. -Alberto González lives in South Florida, works in Spanish & ESL education and provides translation services. Graduated from the Inter American University of Puerto Rico and attended the Music Conservatory of Puerto Rico-