Mati Peruvian Restaurant – Albuquerque, New Mexico
In 2004, The Economist (a British weekly news publication) proclaimed that “Peru can lay claim to one of the world’s dozen or so great cuisines.” In 2005, Bon Appetit declared Peruvian “the next hot cuisine,” extolling its “vibrant ceviches, crispy, spiced rotisserie chickens and packed-with-flavor empanadas” then encapsulating its declaration with “this is one cuisine we could eat every day.” A year later, at the world’s premier gastronomic forum, the International Summit of Gastronomy, Lima (the coastal nation’s capital city) was touted as the “gastronomic capital of the Americas.” In 2011, The Wall Street Journal also called Peruvian food “the next big thing” glossing that it “provides flavors that have the world’s top toques raving, experimenting and catching the next jet.” The following year, BBC expressed the same “next best thing” notion. In 2014, Conde Naste Traveler called Peru “the future of gastronomy.” One year later, The Culinary Exchange expressed that “the world’s next global food trend is…Peruvian cuisine.” A number of other online and print publications parroted that “next big thing” mantle. As an independent observer of the culinary condition, I had to wonder “when will Peruvian food finally arrive as the “next big thing,” especially in Albuquerque which isn’t…