LADIES ONLY W is for Whales and Wasakaka

Matilda

RIP Lindsay
Sep 13, 2006
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In my A-Z of the Dominican Republic we are nearly at the end. This post is on W and W is for Whales and Wasakaka. Looking at whales first.

Each year, between January and March, between 3,000 and 5,000 humpback whales make the long and slow journey from the polar regions of the North Atlantic to the warm clear waters of the the Bay of Samaná in the north east of the Dominican Republic, to give birth and mate for the following year.

The Dominican Republic is fortunate to have one of the largest and best humpback breeding sanctuaries in the world and the Dominican government enforces strict whale protection laws and guidelines to ensure the safety and conservation of these amazing animals. There are strict guidelines if you want to go and watch them, and boats have to keep a respectful distance so as not to disturb them too much.

The female typically breeds every two or three years with a gestation period of eleven months. When born, the calves are about 4 metres long and weigh around 700 kg. They are nursed by their mothers for around six months and leave their mothers when they are just over one year old and around 9 metres long. Both males and females reach maturity at around 15 years old when they are around 16 metres long and weigh 40,000 kg. They live for 45-50 years.

They eat around 5000 lbs of tiny shrimp and plankton and small fish a day, twice a day, but only in the feeding season which lasts 120 days in the cold waters. A group of whales will swim rapidly in wide circles under a school of fish and then blow air through their blowholes. The bubbles then net the fish and each whale will take his or her turn swimming into the shoal, mouth open, swallowing thousands of fish in one gulp.

They are incredible animals and the Dominican Republic has hundreds of tourists each year, just to have the chance of watching them.

My other W is for Wasakaka. This is a sauce, which is served with chicken at one of the Dominican Republic’s fast food restaurants known as El Provocon.

The chicken is cooked over carbon and served with this fabulous sauce and usually accompanied by yucca and lightly fried or boiled onions.

Whilst the recipe for Wasakaka is a secret, luckily Aunt Clara, author of the famous Dominican Cooking recipe book, has her version of it which is scrumptious, and it is here.

I would love to serve it with yucca too but for some reason I am totally incompetent when it comes to cooking it, it is always stringy and hard, so I eat my Wasakaka chicken with mashed potatoes!

What is your W?

Matilda
 

AlterEgo

Administrator
Staff member
Jan 9, 2009
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South Coast
We must be the only ones who really dislike provocon’s wasakaka, we never take it.  I looked at Clara’s recipe, and it sounds like something I’d like, so no explanation for that. :)

As far as yuca, if you can boil potatoes you can boil yuca.  If it’s stringy and hard,  it’s old.  Fresh yuca cooks very fast, is soft and creamy, Dominicans say it’s so fresh it’s “yuca agua tibia”.....so fresh you could put it in warm water and it is ready.  (Not literally, lol).  I sauté a generous amount of onions in a bit of good olive oil, then pour it all over the yuca to serve.  Rarely any leftovers, but if there is, it’s great with eggs for breakfast 

Take the old yuca and shred it, make arepita de yuca.  Yum.  
 

Meemselle

Just A Few Words
Oct 27, 2014
2,842
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No, Joe, say it ain't so: we don't have a double-u....do we?

OK...so even my very proper Spanish tutor at Casa Goethe drew the line at calling "whiskey," "guiskey." Are there any double-u's? Google e-quil e-chav to be my fren....