Muisca cuisine describes the food and preparation theMuisca elaborated. The Muisca were an advanced civilization inhabiting the central highlands of theColombianAndes (Altiplano Cundiboyacense) before theSpanish conquest of the Muisca in the 1530s. Their diet and cuisine consisted of many endemic flora and fauna of Colombia.
The main product of the Muisca wasmaize, in various forms. The advantage of maize was that it could be grown in the various climatic zones the Muisca territories experienced.[1] It was the basis for their diet and the alcoholic drink,chicha, made from fermented maize and sugar.
In theMuisca religion their agriculture and celebration of harvests, conducted along the complexMuisca calendar, were protected byChaquén andNencatacoa. The Muisca ate a variety of roots and tubers and even had a specific word in theirChibcha language for eating those:bgysqua.[2]
Chicha, an alcoholic beverage made from maize and sugarAba, maize, the main product for the Muisca
The Muisca cultivated many different crops in their own regions, part of theMuisca Confederation, and obtained more exotic culinary treats through trade with neighbouringindigenous peoples, with as most important; theLache (cotton, tobacco, tropical fruits, sea snails),Muzo (emeralds, Magdalena River fish, access to gold, spices),Achagua (coca, feathers,yopó, Llanos Basin fish, curare).
The climatic variation of the Muisca territories allowed for theagriculture of different crops.Javier Ocampo López describes the Muisca diet as predominantly vegetarian:potatoes,maize,beans,mandioca,tomatoes,calabazas,peppers and numerous fruits. The Muisca also used grains known today asquinoa.Quybsa, or Ají have also been made by the Muisca in the Pre-Columbian era, especially as a spice for foods.
The main base for the Muisca cuisine was maize, considered a holy crop. The Muisca roastedcorn (maize), ate it off the plant or converted it intopopcorn. The Muisca also made the corn intoarepas, the first presence of the arepa in theAltiplano Cundiboyacense dates to roughly 3,000 years ago.[3]
Arepa in Bogotá with Ají sauce.
Main meat was theguinea pig,endemic toSouth America, which they farmed in their homes. In special cases they atellamas,alpacas,deer,capybara (chigüiro in Spanish), and fish from the rivers and lakes of theAltiplano Cundiboyacense and Magdalena and Llanos through trade. The Muisca drank a lot ofchicha, a fermented alcoholic drink of maize and sugar, served inceramic pots calledurdu oraryballus.[4]
Paleodietary studies performed on theBogotá savanna, where 18 Muisca skeletons ranging in historical age from 8th to 10th century AD and 26 skeletons from the 12th and 13th century AD, together with analysis of 10mummies of theGuane,Lache and Muisca were analysed, have shown that about 60% of the food of the people consisted of vegetary products and 40% of meat and especially fish.
After the Spanish conquest, the access to meat was drastically reduced changing the diet of the Muisca and other indigenous groups of central Colombia. Studies fromTunja, called Hunza in the time of the Muisca, have shown the people did not suffer from malnutrition though.[5]
Fica, maize leafAgua, maize kernelsChiscami, black maize
As maize was the most important crop and food for the Muisca, their language (Muysccubun) had many different words for maize, parts of the plant and the different processes and eating habits.[6]
The Muisca cultivated their crops in so-calledcamellones, artificially elevated surfaces that allowed the roots of the crops to be sufficiently irrigated with the average 700–1000 mm of rain a year and drainage systems regulating the water levels.[7]
Main plants to be cultivated were:
Canna edulis orachira, one of the first plants cultivated in the Andes[8]
Arracacia xanthorrhiza orarracacha, ideally grown at altitudes of 1,800 metres (5,900 ft) and above, used in soups, grilled, boiled, fried or baked[9]
Oxalis tuberosa—although this root is not native to Colombia, it was used by pre-Columbian societies in Cundinamarca and Boyacá, after being introduced from its place of origin in Peru, where the majority of varieties are found[11]
Manihot esculenta oryuca, a very important tuber in the diet of the South American indigenous people, cultivated as of 1120 BCE and still one of the most important ingredients in Colombian and other Latin-American cuisine[14]
The Muisca sat down on the ground while eating and they did not use cutlery, and ate with their hands. The food was served on leaves or in ceramic pots.[44]
Daza, Blanca Ysabel (2013).Historia del proceso de mestizaje alimentario entre Colombia y España [History of the integration process of foods between Colombia and Spain] (PhD) (in Spanish). Barcelona, Spain:Universitat de Barcelona. pp. 1–494.
Ocampo López, Javier (2007),Grandes culturas indígenas de América [Great indigenous cultures of the Americas] (in Spanish), Bogotá, Colombia: Plaza & Janes Editores Colombia S.A., pp. 1–238,ISBN978-958-14-0368-4