Cocina Puerto Rico Recipes from my Abuela's kitchen to yours

Mia Castro

Book - 2026

Mia spent her early career working under prestigious chefs such as José Andrés, Thomas Keller, and Wolfgang Puck, and later cooked for exclusive clients worldwide as a private chef. In 2020, unexpectedly grounded in New York City, she found herself craving the foods of her native Puerto Rico. Over daily FaceTime calls (that sometimes stretched for hours) with her beloved Abuela Sara in San Juan, Mia collected the time-honored recipes that represent her family's homeland. Now, applying her professional knowledge, she has expertly adapted these dishes for you to re-create in any American home kitchen. Cocina Puerto Rico covers everything from salads, fritters, and soups to seafood, meat, and rice dishes to sweets, including re-creation...s of favorites from the island's traditional panade̕ras (bakeries). Classics like Abuela's Sancocho (Root Veggie Stew with Plantain Dumplings), Serenata de Bacalao (Saltfish Salad), Arroz con Jueyes (Stewed Crab Rice), and Tembleque (Creamy Coconut Pudding) bring the signature flavors of Puerto Rican cooking into your home, while dishes like Tropical Caprese Salad and Caribbean Passion Pie introduce some of Mia's modern tropical riffs. --

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Subjects
Genres
cookbooks
recipes
Informational works
Instructional and educational works
Cookbooks
Recipes
Illustrated works
Published
New York, NY : Union Square & Co 2026.
Language
English
Main Author
Mia Castro (author)
Other Authors
Johnny Miller (photographer), Giovanna Huyke (writer of foreword)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
Includes index.
Physical Description
335 pages : color illustrations ; 26 cm
ISBN
9781454958116
  • Handy tools and equipment
  • Essential ingredients and pantry must-haves
  • Sabor y sazon = Flavor and seasoning
  • Salsitas de Abuela = Grandmother sauces
  • Bebidas = Beverages
  • Con el cafecito = With coffee
  • Ensaladas y platos refrescantes = Salads and refreshing dishes
  • Dips y antipastos = Dips and spreads
  • Frituras = Fritters
  • Sopas & asopaos = Soups and asopaos
  • Habichuelas y acompanantes = Beans and side dishes
  • Arroces al caldero = Cauldron-style rice mains
  • Guisos = Stews
  • Postres = Desserts.
  • Foreword
  • Introduction
  • Handy tools and equipment
  • Essential ingredients and pantry must-haves
  • Sabor y sazon (flavor and seasoning)
  • Salsitas de Abuela (grandmother sauces)
  • Bebidas (beverages)
  • Con el cafecito (with coffee)
  • Ensaladas y platos refrescantes (salads and refreshing dishes)
  • Dips y antipastos (dips and spreads)
  • Frituras (fritters)
  • Sopas & asopaos (soups and asopaos)
  • Habichuelas y acompanantes (beans and side dishes)
  • Arroces al caldero (cauldron-style rice mains)
  • Guisos (stews)
  • Postres (desserts)
  • Acknowledgments
  • Index.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Chef Castro's lively and wide-ranging debut collection pays homage to her Puerto Rican roots and her grandmother's home cooking. After a brief history of the Taíno, Spanish, and African influences on the island's cuisine, Castro covers equipment and pantry essentials, including a useful guide to viandas, the starchy fruits and tubers such as breadfruit, yuca, and chayote, that serve as the "backbone" of Puerto Rican cooking. Foundational seasonings and sauces include homemade adobo and sofrito, while beverages include horchata and cafecito. There's classic pega'o, or crunchy, sticky bottom rice, alongside Castro's unique spin on arroz con pollo, a dish that secured her win on the cooking competition show Beat Bobby Flay. She also shares a recipe for grilled skirt steak or pork tenderloin that took the top prize on Gordon Ramsay's Hell's Kitchen. Seafood abounds, from crispy grouper nuggets to saucy crab stew, while plantains and coconut also make frequent appearances. Castro provides useful descriptions for those unfamiliar with the dishes at hand--saltfish serenade is a "down-to-earth Latin cousin of a tuna Nicoise salad"--and shares personal connections (adding beer to black beans is her mother's "special touch"). Those nostalgic for their home cuisine and those new to Puerto Rican fare will be equally taken with this expansive collection. (Feb.)

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