My mouth waters every time I think about Yuca En Escabeche, a traditional Puerto Rican pickled cassava dish that’s as delicious and vibrant as it is versatile. It’s a bit like a punchy vinegar-based potato salad but with olives, onions, and yuca. It holds exceptionally well and makes a perfect appetizer or side for a backyard BBQ or beach picnic.
What is Yuca?
Yuca is a root vegetable like potato or taro. It is shaped like a large yam with a dark brown bark-like exterior and bright white flesh. It has a woody core that looks like a white root running through the middle of it lengthwise. You can find yuca fresh, frozen, and canned in most Latin grocery stores. It’s also often stocked in the freezer section at mainstream grocers.
What Is Escabeche?
Escabeche is a preserving technique that’s very popular all over Latin America. You warm a simple mix of oil and vinegar with a few aromatics and use it to pickle cooked vegetables, fruits (like green bananas), or fish. Because of the high acidity of the sauce, the pickled food stays fresh for a week, developing deeper flavors as it ages. Yuca En Escabeche is boiled cassava root smotd in escabeche sauce and served hot, cold, or at room temperature.
About ingredients for Yuca En Escabeche
Get ready for your new summer favorite! It’s cooling on a hot day, comes together in just a few minutes, and you can easily double, triple, or quadruple the recipe. It’s one of those dishes I’ll make a big batch of and eat nonstop, paired with absolutely everything until it’s all gone. Here’s what you need to make Yuca En Escabeche:
Variations on Yuca en Escabeche
Make this dish your own with additional veggies, spices, and proteins.
What Do I Serve With Yuca En Escabeche?
This dish is excellent on its own, but I love it even more as a side. I pair it with Roasted Chicken, Chuletas Guisadas, or Puerto Rican Rice and Beans.
How To Store Leftovers of Yuca En Escabeche
Store the yuca in an airtight container with plastic film over the surface. If at all possible, use a glass container, as the vinegar and garlic odors will cling to plastic. Refrigerate for up to a week. Freeze for up to 3 months. When ready to serve, thaw frozen yuca overnight in the fridge. Yuca can be served cold or at room temperature. If you prefer to serve it hot, warm it in a microwave until steaming.
Yuca En Escabeche is a traditional Puerto Rican dish of pickled cassava, olives, and onions. It’s delicious, vibrant, easy, and versatile!
Servings: 8 cups
Prep time: 10 minutes mins
Cook time: 30 minutes mins
Resting Time 30 minutes mins
Total time: 1 hour hr 10 minutes mins
Ingredients
Instructions for Yuca En EscabecheÂ
- If the yuca is fresh, peel and split it into 4-inch long quarters. Remove the woody center root. If the yuca is frozen, split it into 4-inch halves. Make sure the woody center has been removed and then cut each half in half.
- Add yuca to a Dutch oven or other large heavy-bottomed pot. Add water until you cover the yuca by two inches. Add 2 teaspoons of salt. Boil until the yuca is fork-tender but not mushy, about 25 to 30 minutes. Then drain the yuca and cool.
- While the yuca cooks, set a small pot over medium-low heat. Add the olive oil and warm. Add the vinegar, peppercorns, bay leaf, remaining 2 teaspoons salt, adobo, onions, garlic, olives, and olive brine to the warm oil. Cook for 10 minutes, stirring occasionally, then remove from the heat.
- Add the yuca to a large bowl. Cover the drained yuca with escabeche. Let it sit at room temperature for at least 30 minutes to develop the flavors, then serve.
Nutrition
Calories: 270kcal Carbohydrates: 24g Protein: 1g Fat: 19g Sodium: 1346mg Fiber: 2g
How to Make Yuca En Escabeche – Step by Step Photos
Prepare 1 pound of yuca. If the yuca is fresh, peel and split it into 4-inch long quarters. Remove the woody center root. If the yuca is frozen, split it into 4-inch halves. Make sure the woody center has been removed and then cut each half in half.
Add the yuca to a Dutch oven or other large heavy-bottomed pot. Add water until you cover the yuca by two inches. Add 2 teaspoons of salt. Boil until the yuca is fork-tender but not mushy, about 25 to 30 minutes. Then drain the yuca and cool.
While the yuca cooks set a small stainless steel or enameled pot over medium-low heat. Avoid aluminum pots as highly acidic ingredients, like vinegar, can cause aluminum to leach into food, which leaves the food with a metallic taste. Add 2/3 cup of olive oil and warm. You don’t want the oil hot, just warm. Add the 1/3 cup of vinegar, 1/2 teaspoon peppercorns, 3 bay leaves, remaining 2 teaspoons salt, 1 teaspoon adobo, 1 medium onion sliced in half moons, 8 thinly sliced garlic cloves, 1/4 cup Spanish olives, and 1/8 cup of olive brine to the warm oil. Cook for 10 minutes, stirring occasionally. The onions should remain white but will wilt. Once wilted, remove from the heat.
Add the boiled yuca to a large boil and cover with the warm escabeche sauce. Allow the yuca to pickle for a minimum of 30 minutes before serving. To develop deeper flavors, cover the bowl with plastic wrap directly on the surface of the yuca and refrigerate overnight. Serve cold, at room temperature, or heat in a microwave until steaming. Enjoy this incredible dish as is or serve it with Roasted Chicken, Chuletas Guisadas, or Puerto Rican Rice and Beans!
I hope you’re going to enjoy this recipe for Yuca En Escabeche.
Recipe by Cook Good Recipes