Quinoa

Chenopodium quinoa

Origin: The high Andes of South America, above all the Altiplano around Lake Titicaca on the Peru–Bolivia border, where the wild goosefoots were domesticated by the Andean peoples

Quinoa is not a grain at all, in the strict sense, but a pseudocereal: like buckwheat (see that entry) it is eaten as a grain yet belongs not to the grasses but to a broad-leaved family, the Amaranthaceae, which counts spinach, beetroot, chard, and amaranth among its members. Chenopodium quinoa is a goosefoot, its genus name built from the Greek for 'goose' and 'foot' after the shape of its leaves, and what it yields is not a true grain but a small, flat, disc-shaped seed borne in great dense panicles that ripen in colours from pale ivory through red to near-black. It was domesticated in the high Andes of South America, in the cold, thin air of the Altiplano above 3,500 metres where maize will not ripen and few crops survive, and it is supremely adapted to that punishing ground: tolerant of frost, drought, poor and saline soils, and the fierce ultraviolet light of the high plateau. The seeds carry a natural defence that has shaped the whole human relationship with the plant: a coating of bitter compounds called saponins, soapy and astringent, which deter birds and must be washed or rubbed away before the seed can be eaten. Andean cooks have always rinsed quinoa in many changes of water, or abraded the coat off, and the saponin-rich rinsings were themselves put to use as a soap and a folk remedy. Cultivators long ago selected 'sweet', low-saponin types alongside the bitter ones, and the reduction of saponin content has been a central aim of modern breeding. Quinoa is a single species, but it is not a single thing: over thousands of years of cultivation across the enormous range of Andean environments it diverged into several distinct ecotypes, each adapted to its own ground and each the basis of a regional variety still grown today. The highland or Altiplano type of the Titicaca basin is the heartland quinoa, the pale seed of the Peruvian and Bolivian plateau. The salares type of the southern Bolivian salt flats, grown on the mineral crust around the Salar de Uyuni, gives the large-grained Quinua Real, the 'Royal quinoa' prized above all others. The valley type of the moister inter-Andean valleys of Ecuador, Colombia, and northern Peru grows taller at lower altitude; and the coastal or sea-level type of south-central Chile, grown by the Mapuche far from the high plateau, is adapted to long summer days and low elevation, a quality that would prove decisive when, in the modern age, quinoa was at last carried to the temperate latitudes of the wider world.

For almost the whole of its history quinoa did not travel at all. It was the staff of life of the Andean highlands for five thousand years and more, the 'mother grain' of the Tiwanaku, the Wari, and the Inca, grown across the plateau and the valleys from southern Colombia to central Chile and north-western Argentina, but it was hemmed in by the very adaptations that made it: a crop of cold, high, short-day country that did not readily grow elsewhere, and a food so bound to indigenous Andean identity that the Spanish, on conquering the Inca empire in the sixteenth century, actively suppressed it. The conquistadors and the colonial church disdained quinoa as 'Indian food' and a prop of native religion and self-sufficiency; they tore up its fields, discouraged its sowing, and planted in its place the wheat and barley of Europe. Quinoa survived only because the highland communities kept growing it, quietly, in the remote reaches of the sierra where the colonial writ ran thin, and for four centuries it remained a poor people's food, all but unknown beyond the Andes. Its journey to the world is therefore extraordinarily recent, a matter of decades rather than centuries. In the 1970s and 1980s a handful of North American enthusiasts carried Andean seed north and began to grow quinoa commercially in the high, cold San Luis Valley of Colorado, the first quinoa cultivated outside South America. From that beachhead, and on the rising tide of Western interest in health foods and plant protein, quinoa was discovered by the affluent kitchens of the global North as a 'superfood': gluten-free, high in protein, and carrying all nine of the essential amino acids in a balance rare among plant foods. The coastal Chilean ecotype, indifferent to daylength, proved the key that unlocked cultivation in the temperate world, and quinoa was soon being grown experimentally in North America, in Europe (in France, the Netherlands, and Britain), and later in India, China, and Australia. The boom crowned itself when the United Nations declared 2013 the International Year of Quinoa, honouring the Andean peoples who had safeguarded the crop and proclaiming its promise for global food security. The surge in Western demand transformed the economics of the Andean Altiplano, bringing new income to quinoa farmers and, at the same time, raising hard questions about the rising local price of a food that had nourished those same communities for millennia. From a suppressed peasant grain of the high Andes, quinoa had become, within a single generation, a global commodity on the supermarket shelves and restaurant menus of the world.

Quinoa today lives a double life. In its Andean homeland it remains a genuine staple and a food of deep cultural identity, eaten across Peru, Bolivia, and Ecuador in the everyday soups, stews, and porridges of the sierra: the Peruvian sopa de quinua and the milk-and-cheese pesque, the Aymara steamed breads kispiña of the Bolivian salt flats, the sweet quinoa-and-milk drinks of the Ecuadorian highlands. Peru and Bolivia remain the world's largest producers by far, and the Bolivian Quinua Real of the Salar de Uyuni commands a premium as the finest large-grained quinoa in the world. Beyond the Andes, quinoa is the emblematic health food of the early twenty-first century. In the kitchens of North America, Europe, and Australia it is treated as a virtuous, versatile grain substitute: simmered until the seeds uncurl their little white tails and tossed into salads, built into the vegetable-and-grain 'power bowls' and 'Buddha bowls' of the wellness table, spooned as a breakfast porridge, stuffed into peppers, and stirred into a gluten-free tabbouleh in place of bulgur. The red and black varieties, holding their shape and colour better than the white, have become favourites of the restaurant plate. Commercial cultivation has spread to Colorado and Canada, to France, the Netherlands, and Britain, to the Indian Himalaya, to China, and to Tasmania, though the Andes still grow the great bulk of the crop and the finest of it. Nutritionally quinoa earns much of its reputation: it is a complete protein, rich in fibre, magnesium, iron, and B vitamins, naturally free of gluten, and quick to cook. It was studied by NASA in the 1990s as a candidate crop for sustaining astronauts on long missions, a measure of the regard in which its nutritional completeness is held. Its sudden global fame has been a mixed blessing for the Andean communities that gave it to the world, but it has also, after four centuries of neglect, restored the mother grain of the Inca to honour, and carried it from the thin air of the Altiplano to tables on every continent.

Historical Journey of Quinoa

Lake Titicaca and the Altiplano, Peruc. 3000 BCE

The high plateau around Lake Titicaca, straddling the present border of Peru and Bolivia at some 3,800 metres above the sea, is the heartland of quinoa and the centre of its domestication and diversity. Here, in the cold, thin, ultraviolet-bright air of the Altiplano where maize cannot ripen, the Andean peoples brought the wild goosefoots into cultivation thousands of years ago and built upon quinoa, the potato, and the bean a civilisation in one of the harshest farming environments on earth. The pale highland quinoa of the Titicaca basin is the archetypal mother grain, and from this centre the crop's regional ecotypes spread across the Andes. To the cultures of the lake, the Tiwanaku and later the Inca, quinoa was 'chisaya mama', the mother of all grains, sown with ceremony and held sacred. The Peruvian highland kitchen built around quinoa a repertoire that endures unbroken from before the conquest. The everyday dish is sopa de quinua, the brothy highland soup of quinoa simmered with potato, vegetables, and herbs that is the daily food of the sierra from Puno to Cusco. The most distinctive is pesque (or p'esque) de quinua, a thick, comforting dish of quinoa cooked in milk and finished with fresh Andean cheese, the prestige preparation of the Puno highlands around the lake. And the simplest is quinua graneada, quinoa boiled until each seed uncurls its little white tail and served fluffy and granular as the highland counterpart of rice, beside stews and braises. Around the lake, quinoa is not a health-food novelty but the ancestral staff of life.

The Salar de Uyuni and Southern Altiplano, Boliviac. 2500 BCE

The southern Altiplano of Bolivia, the harsh, high, salt-crusted country around the Salar de Uyuni, the greatest salt flat on earth, is the home of a second great quinoa, the salares ecotype that gives Quinua Real, the 'Royal quinoa'. Grown on the mineral fringes of the salt flats at nearly 4,000 metres, in a place so dry and so cold that almost nothing else will grow, the Royal quinoa develops a seed markedly larger than any other, and it is prized above all quinoas in the world market. This is a genuine second centre of the crop, the domestication ground of the big-grained quinoa of the salt-flat country, cultivated by the Aymara of the high plateau for millennia. The defining dish of this country is kispiña (also kispiño), the steamed quinoa breads of the Aymara, small dense cakes of quinoa flour bound with fat and steamed over the high-altitude pot, a food carried by herders and travellers across the cold plateau and made for the festivals of the Altiplano. The Bolivian highland kitchen also makes pisara, the toasted and boiled quinoa served granular as a staple beside stews, the salt-flat counterpart of the Peruvian graneada. From this remote, demanding ground comes the most coveted quinoa in the world, and it was Bolivian Altiplano seed that, in the twentieth century, would carry the crop north to the first fields cultivated outside South America.

The Inter-Andean Valleys, Ecuadorian Sierrac. 1500 BCE

North from the Titicaca heartland, quinoa spread along the spine of the Andes into the moister, lower inter-Andean valleys of Ecuador, Colombia, and northern Peru, where it developed into the valley ecotype: a taller plant grown at lower, gentler altitudes than the windswept Altiplano. The Ecuadorian sierra, the high valleys strung between the volcanoes from Riobamba to Cayambe, became a quinoa country of its own, and the crop remains a staple of indigenous and mestizo highland cooking across the country. The Ecuadorian highland kitchen treats quinoa with a particular fondness for the sweet and the milky. Quinua con leche, also called colada de quinua, is a warming drink or thin porridge of quinoa simmered with milk, cinnamon, and panela (raw cane sugar), taken at breakfast and as a comforting evening drink across the Ecuadorian sierra, the soft sweetness and the faint earthiness of the quinoa a beloved everyday pleasure. Quinoa also goes into the brothy highland soups of Ecuador, often enriched with fresh cheese and potato in the manner of the Andean north. From these northern valleys the crop ran on into Colombia, marking the northern reach of quinoa's pre-Columbian range.

South-Central Chile (Mapuche Country)c. 1000 BCE

Far to the south of the high plateau, in the cool, green, lower country of south-central Chile, quinoa developed its most distinct form of all: the coastal or sea-level ecotype, grown by the Mapuche people in a land of long summer days and low elevation, utterly unlike the short-day, high-altitude Altiplano. The Mapuche grew quinoa, which they called dawe (or kinwa), alongside maize, beans, and squash long before the Inca pushed south or the Spanish arrived, and the southern Chilean coastal quinoa adapted, over centuries, to flower and seed under the long days and mild conditions of the temperate latitudes. This adaptation, of little consequence in pre-Columbian times, would prove the single most important quality of any quinoa in the modern age. The highland quinoas of the Altiplano are short-day plants that will not crop properly in the long summers of the temperate world; the coastal Chilean type, indifferent to daylength, is the form from which the quinoa of Europe and the wider temperate world was bred. In its own country the Mapuche and southern Chilean kitchen keeps quinoa in the hearty cooking of the south, simmered with the squash and beans of the indigenous garden and seasoned with merkén, the smoked chilli of the Mapuche. The coastal ecotype is, in a sense, the bridge between the ancient Andean quinoa and the global crop it would become.

The San Luis Valley, Colorado, United Statesc. 1983 CE

Quinoa was first cultivated outside South America in the high, cold San Luis Valley of southern Colorado, where, in the late 1970s and early 1980s, a small group of North American enthusiasts who had encountered the grain in the Andes began to grow it from imported Bolivian and Andean seed. The valley, a broad plateau ringed by the Rocky Mountains at over 2,300 metres, offered something close to the cold, high, sunny conditions of the Altiplano, and it became the cradle of the North American quinoa industry and the springboard for the crop's leap into the global diet. It was in North America that quinoa was remade as a 'superfood'. Carried on the rising interest in vegetarianism, plant protein, and gluten-free eating, quinoa moved from the health-food shop to the supermarket and the restaurant, prized for being a complete protein, quick to cook, and endlessly adaptable. The American kitchen gave the grain its modern global repertoire: the quinoa power bowl or Buddha bowl, in which fluffy quinoa is the base for roasted vegetables, beans, avocado, and a bright dressing; the quinoa breakfast porridge, simmered with milk, fruit, and maple in place of oats; and quinoa-stuffed peppers and squash, the grain a wholesome filling baked until tender. From Colorado the cultivation of quinoa spread to Canada and, by way of the same health-food enthusiasm, to Europe and beyond.

Western Europe (Britain and France)c. 2000 CE

Europe embraced quinoa at the turn of the twenty-first century, and the embrace was twofold: as an imported superfood on the supermarket shelf, and, increasingly, as a crop grown on European soil. The cultivation of quinoa in the temperate fields of France, the Netherlands, and Britain was made possible by the coastal Chilean ecotype, the daylength-indifferent quinoa that, unlike the short-day plants of the Altiplano, would flower and seed under the long summer days of the European latitudes; from that lineage, European growers and plant breeders raised varieties suited to Anjou, the Low Countries, and the English counties, and a home-grown European quinoa appeared alongside the Andean import. In the European kitchen quinoa became the versatile virtuous grain of the health-conscious table, and above all the base of the salad. The gluten-free quinoa tabbouleh, in which fluffy quinoa stands in for the traditional bulgur amid a great quantity of chopped parsley, mint, tomato, and lemon, became a fixture of the deli counter and the summer table; and the quinoa salad in a hundred forms, dressed with herbs, roasted vegetables, feta, and citrus, became the lunchbox and buffet staple of modern Europe. The United Nations' designation of 2013 as the International Year of Quinoa, championed from within the Andean nations but resonating loudly in Europe, set the seal on the grain's arrival as a global food, four centuries after the Spanish had tried to stamp it out.

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Ingredient originTrade or transit route
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c. 2000 CE
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Quinoa

Quinoa

Chenopodium quinoa

Grains & LegumesAmaranthaceae

🌍Origin

The high Andes of South America, above all the Altiplano around Lake Titicaca on the Peru–Bolivia border, where the wild goosefoots were domesticated by the Andean peoples — Domesticated in the Andean highlands some 5,000 to 7,000 years ago; the staff of Andean civilisation until the Spanish conquest, suppressed under colonial rule, and carried to the world only in the late twentieth century

🌱Domestication

Quinoa is not a grain at all, in the strict sense, but a pseudocereal: like buckwheat (see that entry) it is eaten as a grain yet belongs not to the grasses but to a broad-leaved family, the Amaranthaceae, which counts spinach, beetroot, chard, and amaranth among its members. Chenopodium quinoa is a goosefoot, its genus name built from the Greek for 'goose' and 'foot' after the shape of its leaves, and what it yields is not a true grain but a small, flat, disc-shaped seed borne in great dense panicles that ripen in colours from pale ivory through red to near-black. It was domesticated in the high Andes of South America, in the cold, thin air of the Altiplano above 3,500 metres where maize will not ripen and few crops survive, and it is supremely adapted to that punishing ground: tolerant of frost, drought, poor and saline soils, and the fierce ultraviolet light of the high plateau.

The seeds carry a natural defence that has shaped the whole human relationship with the plant: a coating of bitter compounds called saponins, soapy and astringent, which deter birds and must be washed or rubbed away before the seed can be eaten. Andean cooks have always rinsed quinoa in many changes of water, or abraded the coat off, and the saponin-rich rinsings were themselves put to use as a soap and a folk remedy. Cultivators long ago selected 'sweet', low-saponin types alongside the bitter ones, and the reduction of saponin content has been a central aim of modern breeding.

Quinoa is a single species, but it is not a single thing: over thousands of years of cultivation across the enormous range of Andean environments it diverged into several distinct ecotypes, each adapted to its own ground and each the basis of a regional variety still grown today. The highland or Altiplano type of the Titicaca basin is the heartland quinoa, the pale seed of the Peruvian and Bolivian plateau. The salares type of the southern Bolivian salt flats, grown on the mineral crust around the Salar de Uyuni, gives the large-grained Quinua Real, the 'Royal quinoa' prized above all others. The valley type of the moister inter-Andean valleys of Ecuador, Colombia, and northern Peru grows taller at lower altitude; and the coastal or sea-level type of south-central Chile, grown by the Mapuche far from the high plateau, is adapted to long summer days and low elevation, a quality that would prove decisive when, in the modern age, quinoa was at last carried to the temperate latitudes of the wider world.

Global Voyage

For almost the whole of its history quinoa did not travel at all. It was the staff of life of the Andean highlands for five thousand years and more, the 'mother grain' of the Tiwanaku, the Wari, and the Inca, grown across the plateau and the valleys from southern Colombia to central Chile and north-western Argentina, but it was hemmed in by the very adaptations that made it: a crop of cold, high, short-day country that did not readily grow elsewhere, and a food so bound to indigenous Andean identity that the Spanish, on conquering the Inca empire in the sixteenth century, actively suppressed it. The conquistadors and the colonial church disdained quinoa as 'Indian food' and a prop of native religion and self-sufficiency; they tore up its fields, discouraged its sowing, and planted in its place the wheat and barley of Europe. Quinoa survived only because the highland communities kept growing it, quietly, in the remote reaches of the sierra where the colonial writ ran thin, and for four centuries it remained a poor people's food, all but unknown beyond the Andes.

Its journey to the world is therefore extraordinarily recent, a matter of decades rather than centuries. In the 1970s and 1980s a handful of North American enthusiasts carried Andean seed north and began to grow quinoa commercially in the high, cold San Luis Valley of Colorado, the first quinoa cultivated outside South America. From that beachhead, and on the rising tide of Western interest in health foods and plant protein, quinoa was discovered by the affluent kitchens of the global North as a 'superfood': gluten-free, high in protein, and carrying all nine of the essential amino acids in a balance rare among plant foods. The coastal Chilean ecotype, indifferent to daylength, proved the key that unlocked cultivation in the temperate world, and quinoa was soon being grown experimentally in North America, in Europe (in France, the Netherlands, and Britain), and later in India, China, and Australia.

The boom crowned itself when the United Nations declared 2013 the International Year of Quinoa, honouring the Andean peoples who had safeguarded the crop and proclaiming its promise for global food security. The surge in Western demand transformed the economics of the Andean Altiplano, bringing new income to quinoa farmers and, at the same time, raising hard questions about the rising local price of a food that had nourished those same communities for millennia. From a suppressed peasant grain of the high Andes, quinoa had become, within a single generation, a global commodity on the supermarket shelves and restaurant menus of the world.

🍽Modern Culinary Role

Quinoa today lives a double life. In its Andean homeland it remains a genuine staple and a food of deep cultural identity, eaten across Peru, Bolivia, and Ecuador in the everyday soups, stews, and porridges of the sierra: the Peruvian sopa de quinua and the milk-and-cheese pesque, the Aymara steamed breads kispiña of the Bolivian salt flats, the sweet quinoa-and-milk drinks of the Ecuadorian highlands. Peru and Bolivia remain the world's largest producers by far, and the Bolivian Quinua Real of the Salar de Uyuni commands a premium as the finest large-grained quinoa in the world.

Beyond the Andes, quinoa is the emblematic health food of the early twenty-first century. In the kitchens of North America, Europe, and Australia it is treated as a virtuous, versatile grain substitute: simmered until the seeds uncurl their little white tails and tossed into salads, built into the vegetable-and-grain 'power bowls' and 'Buddha bowls' of the wellness table, spooned as a breakfast porridge, stuffed into peppers, and stirred into a gluten-free tabbouleh in place of bulgur. The red and black varieties, holding their shape and colour better than the white, have become favourites of the restaurant plate. Commercial cultivation has spread to Colorado and Canada, to France, the Netherlands, and Britain, to the Indian Himalaya, to China, and to Tasmania, though the Andes still grow the great bulk of the crop and the finest of it.

Nutritionally quinoa earns much of its reputation: it is a complete protein, rich in fibre, magnesium, iron, and B vitamins, naturally free of gluten, and quick to cook. It was studied by NASA in the 1990s as a candidate crop for sustaining astronauts on long missions, a measure of the regard in which its nutritional completeness is held. Its sudden global fame has been a mixed blessing for the Andean communities that gave it to the world, but it has also, after four centuries of neglect, restored the mother grain of the Inca to honour, and carried it from the thin air of the Altiplano to tables on every continent.

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