Many of the world’s favourite foods originate in Chile, including maize, potatoes, squash and beans, and these formed the basis of the diets of indigenous tribes. Culinary traditions varied according to the local landscape, and with some ethnic groups remaining relatively isolated, they retained their individual identities. The arrival of the Spanish changed everything, however, and resulted in the diverse, multicultural society and cuisine found in the country today.
Two of the most ancient landscapes in Chile, to the left the Strait of Magellan, and on the right the Patagonian Steppe, still inhabited by llamas, the country’s earliest herded animal.