A good Cuban Sofrito Recipe is really the secret to elevating almost any Cuban recipe you are going to make. So while don’t want to put any pressure on your cuban sofrito, it is kind of a big deal.
What is Cuban Sofrito
A Cuban Sofrito is the foundation of so many recipes. It is onions, combination peppers (red and others), garlic sauteed in olive oil and seasoned with traditional Cuban and caribbean spices that are married together to form the base to so many delicious meals.
What are traditional Cuban spices? In addition to salt, garlic powder, onion powder, cumin, oregano and bay leaves. (pepper is not usually used but we love it)
Having a delicious sofrito, is the first step to making something amazing. The good news is that making a good Cuban Sofrito is not difficult, and with just a few tweaks you can probably take your sofrito game to the next level.
The first thing an authentic Cuban Sofrito calls for is onions. You want to be sure to use a large yellow onion, and dice your onion so that all the pieces are uniform.
Next a Cuban Sofrito Recipe calls for 3 peppers. We recommend doing a red bell pepper, a poblano pepper, and an orange pepper. The most important thing is to use three peppers that you like to use. There is no law that says we must use a green bell pepper. A Cubanelle pepper could work well here or you can double up on red bell peppers or go with a green pepper. You get the idea. Then you you round out your Cuban Sofrito Recipe with minced garlic, sazon, bay leaves, cumin and salt and pepper.
A Game Changing Trick
Season as you go! The idea is to add seasonings to the pan as you cook each ingredient.
What does this mean? It means when you add the onions, as they cook you want to season them with some of the salt and pepper, and some of the sazon. Then once you add the peppers you add the rest of the seasoning, and then add the bay leaves.
Why do we do this? We do this because cooking the seasoning with the vegetables help the seasonings open up. It also helps you build more flavor. Flavor is the name of the game with sofrito.
What You Can do With Your Cuban Sofrito
Like we said at the beginning, this simple sofrito recipe is the base for countless of recipes. However what you do next just depends on what recipe you are going to make. This is because not all recipes will need tomato sauce.
Tomato Based Recipes
Meaning, the recipes that after cooking the vegetables, we add a tablespoon or two of tomato sauce with a 1/4 cup of a good vino seco: .
No Tomato Recipes
Meaning after you make the sofrito, you will not add any tomato sauce. Think things like beans and stews. They have the sofrito base but not the tomato flavor.
Sofrito
Course: PrepCuisine: CubanDifficulty: Easy5
servings11
minutes18
minutesIngredients
1 large onion, finely chopped
1 red bell pepper, finely chopped
1 orange bell pepper finely chopped
1 poblano pepper, finely chopped
6 cloves of garlic, finely minced
2 bay leaves
¼ teaspoon of ground cumin
½ teaspoon Sazon con Achiote
1 teaspoon kosher salt (more salt may be needed)
cracked black pepper to taste
¼ cup of extra virgin olive oil
Directions
- Turn your heat to high. Once the pan is hot, throw in your onions. Then pour in a little olive oil just to coat the onions in the pan. Add a little salt and pepper and half the salt and pepper as you begin to cook your onions.
- Once the onions begin to look slightly transparent, throw in your peppers. Once you add your peppers, if you feel the pan looks a little dry- add a little more oil. Season the onions and peppers with the rest of your seasonings. This means a little more salt and pepper, cumin the bay leaves and the remainder of your Sazon con achiote.
- After about 3-5 minutes your peppers and onions should be nice and soft. Move them off to one side of the pan and add in your garlic on the other. Add a little more olive oil to the garlic and let the garlic cook on it’s own for 2-3 minutes to be sure it is cooked evenly. Then mix the garlic in with the rest of the vegetables.
- Taste your vegetables. Adjust the salt and pepper to taste. At this point your “sofrito” is done. You decide where it goes.
- You can add a tablespoon or two of tomato sauce with a 1/4 cup of a good vino seco if you are going to be doing things like Carne Con Papa, Ropa Vieja, Picadillo, Arroz Con Pollo, Fricase de Pollo. But if you’re doing things like making Frijoles Negro or a Potaje you would eliminate the tomato sauce.