Changua Explained

Changua
Country: Bogota
Region:Colombia
National Cuisine:Colombia
Course:Breakfast
Type:Soup
Served:Hot or room temperature
Main Ingredient:Water, milk, eggs, scallions

Changua (milk broth with eggs) is a typical hearty breakfast soup of the central Andes region of Colombia, in particular in the Boyacá and Cundinamarca area, including the capital, Bogotá. It also has a reputation as a hangover cure, being a popular late night meal.[1] [2]

The changua comes from the Muisca word "xie" which means water or river, and "nygua" that means salt. A mixture of equal amounts of water and milk is heated with a dash of salt. Once it comes to a boil, one egg per serving is cracked into the pot without breaking the yolk, and allowed to cook for about a minute while covered. The broth is served in a bowl, garnished with scallions, which may be fried beforehand but usually are not, curly cilantro, and a piece of stale bread called "calado" which softens in the changua. It is sometimes served with pieces of cheese which melt into the broth. Scallions and cilantro may be added as an option even while the soup boils.

Modern versions of changua include chicken stock instead of water, tomato concassé, chopped cilantro, almojábana[3] and "Choclo" arepas.

See also

References

  1. Web site: @NatGeoUK. 2020-12-22. Nine hangover cures from around the world. 2021-09-20. National Geographic. en-gb.
  2. Web site: Hopson. Phoebe. 2017-05-19. Drunk food: Night out nosh. 2021-09-20. The Bogotá Post. en-GB.
  3. Web site: 2018-03-15. A History of Bogotá in 9 Dishes. 2021-09-20. Roads & Kingdoms. en-US.