Aji de Gallina
Lima, Peru (criollo culinary tradition; medieval Spanish-Moorish-Andean synthesis)
Ají de gallina is Lima's most comforting dish — shredded chicken in a rich, yellow, ají amarillo sauce thickened with stale white bread soaked in evaporated milk, ground walnuts, and Parmesan, spiced with the characteristic fruity heat of ají amarillo paste and seasoned with turmeric for colour depth. The sauce is genuinely complex: the bread thickening is a medieval Spanish technique; the walnuts are a legacy of Moorish-influenced colonial cookery; the ají amarillo is Andean. The three cultural streams of Peruvian cuisine — indigenous, Spanish, and Moorish — converge in a single sauce. The chicken is poached and shredded, then simmered briefly in the sauce; the bread produces an extraordinarily silky, rich base.