The Perfect Holiday Gift Gift Now

The Pepper People

Saveur

|

Summer 2019

The Baniwa, an Indigenous group in Brazil, have made a market for their ancestral chiles.

- Nicholas Gill

The Pepper People

The slender, yellow-gree kapitsiriwi pepper is named after a blowpipe dart. Then there’s dzaka inapa, resembling a jaguar’s tooth, and kawathsidalipe, extremely hot and shaped like a clay pot. Spanning from orange to green to yellow to purple, 80 distinct pepper varieties are cultivated by the Baniwa, a people who have lived in small settlements in northwestern Brazil’s Içana River basin for thousands of years.

“As far back as I can remember, there were always peppers around,” says Alfredo Brazâo, a Baniwa man who eats these indigenous chiles with every meal. Arable land is sparse here, so many Baniwa families plant their gardens on hills in the jungle to avoid flooding, even if doing so requires a bit of a journey. Brazâo and I hike for more than an hour from the village of Yamado to a garden where one family is growing more than 500 plants. Along the way, he recalls how a shaman once gave his sister a pepper as part of an adulthood initiation ritual; his mother told her to “chew it, swallow it, and feel the pain.” The burn represents suffering, Brazâo says, and with patience, either can be overcome. The Baniwa will also rub chiles on the gums of infants, which they believe protects the children from evil spirits.

MÁS HISTORIAS DE Saveur

Saveur

Saveur

Raising a Better Bird

Blue Apron founder Matt Wadiak has moved onto greener pastures, where happy chickens roam free.

time to read

2 mins

Fall 2020

Saveur

Saveur

One Good Bottle

Tamara Irish is a natural winemaker. Way natural.

time to read

2 mins

Fall 2020

Saveur

Saveur

My Not-So-Secret Garden

Good (vegetable-laden) fences make good neighbors in one tiny town.

time to read

4 mins

Fall 2020

Saveur

Saveur

Pralines: How They Cook 'Em in New Orleans

Pralines: How They Cook ’Em in New Orleans

time to read

4 mins

Winter 2019-20

Saveur

Saveur

My Father's French Onion Soup

Postwar Paris had a lifelong influence on James Edisto Mitchell—both as an artist and a cook BY Shane Mitchell

time to read

7 mins

Winter 2019-20

Saveur

Saveur

Our All-Time Best Recipes

If anyone should know if a recipe’s a keeper, it’s the person tasked with making sense of the original instructions—from the far reaches of Sri Lanka, say, or a famous chef who measures nothing. This might explain why many test kitchen staffers named favorites that their predecessors had tested and recommended. (Though a couple put forth recipes they developed themselves.) And while Saveur never shies away from the oddball authentic ingredient, the fare on the following pages is the stuff we cook at home, over and over again. Consider it global comfort food.

time to read

19 mins

Winter 2019-20

Saveur

Saveur

Genever Is the Original Juniper Spirit

Don’t call it a comeback. Or gin

time to read

5 mins

Winter 2019-20

Saveur

Saveur

Tending The Bines

Overshadowed by high-end viticulture, the art of growing hops for beer might not always get the recognition it deserves.

time to read

3 mins

Summer 2019

Saveur

Saveur

Field Of Dreams

The son of an innovative pea farmer is carrying on his father’s legacy.

time to read

1 mins

Summer 2019

Saveur

Saveur

Jamaican Jerk Marinade - Fire And Spice

Jamaican jerk is more than a marinade—it’s a smoky, flame-grilled cooking style that uses the best ingredients of its home island.

time to read

2 mins

Summer 2019

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size