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Malagasy cuisine

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The eating of dessert is not widespread: fruit is eaten whenever anyone wants and at any time. The banana, found in all of Madagascar's regions, figures prominently, if not in the top place. When you want sweetness, sugar cane, cut into short sticks and chewed, provides sugar in quantity.
 
Beside traditional cuisine there is another modern one, using all the resources so far neglected or unknown and permitting each region to creatively use their own natural products which are not found elsewhere: for example where coconuts are common, the flesh is grated, mixed with water, sieved and the juice produced is added to the cooking water to give a new flavour to chicken, pounded cassava leaves, meat, fish and shellfish.
 
Each population adapts to its environment and therefore in the dry and pastoral south the populationd draws strenght and vigour by consuming a great deal of curdled milk from its many herds, while in forested areas you can enjoy the benefits of wild honey which serves as accompaniment to rice. But the staple food can change when rice production is deficient, when it will be replaced by cassava cooked without added suggar or other products and also tubers such as sweet potato or tarot and corn, cooked or grilled on the fire.
 
It is the restaurant tables, which provide an idea of the country's culinary variety with each region having its specialty: frog legs from Ambatolampy, fresh water fish and duck from Alaotra Ambatondrazaka, strips of fried beef fillet ''varanga'' from Antananarivo, crayfish from Ambositra. Those wanting to taste all the varieties of seafood (squid, lobsters, crabs, shrimps, prawns, fish, oysters, mussels) prepared by imaginative chefs with all the sauces possible, can satisfy their gustative curiosity in the restaurants of the coastal cities: the discovery of a country's gastronomy is yet another aspect of tourism. And to put tourists at ease, and not totally changing their eating habits, local restaurateurs are increasingly adapting to this context by providing menus of Chinese, Indian, French food etc. in their establishments in the most of the larger towns in Madagascar.
 
If classic menus can be found, there are also some local specialties, some of which should intrigue tourists such as the following recipe which can be counted among pastries, except it is not baked in an oven: these are the large brown rolls, sold open air, on small street side tables in the capital: the ''koban-dravina'', a specialty of the Antananarivo area. As the use of the oven is not familiar to everyone, certain artisans have discovered a method of making a kind of local cake, the mixture cooked in water in a large pot for two days over a large wooden fire and constantly stirred. Here is the recipe: rice flour mixed with sugar and whole, unroasted peanuts. The mix is then carefully wrapped in banana leaves and firmly tied with fibres from the bark of a plant before being placed in the cooking pot with water. These rolls wrapped in banana leaves browned by cooking are sold retail and sliced at the request of the customer.

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