Receta Caldo De | Pollo Colombiano

He lifted the spoon. The first sip was a baptism. The warmth spread from his chest to his fingertips. It tasted of his mother’s patience. Of the rain on the roof. Of the guascas and the corn. Of Colombia itself.

Elena moved with the grace of ritual. First, she placed the pechuga de pollo (chicken breast) and a muslo (thigh) with the bone still in— the bone gives the soul , she always said—into a large clay pot filled with cold water. She added three plump cloves of garlic, smashed under her knife, and a fat wedge of onion.

The rain was hammering the tin roof of the finca in Antioquia. Inside, the world smelled of cilantro, garlic, and woodsmoke. Elena knew the recipe by heart— receta caldo de pollo colombiano —but tonight, she wasn't cooking for herself. She was cooking for her son, Mateo, who had just arrived from the cold, gray city of Bogotá, shivering and sniffling. receta caldo de pollo colombiano

He took a deep breath, his nose clearing instantly.

"Mami," he whispered, his voice thick. "This is the real medicine." He lifted the spoon

Outside, the rain kept falling. But inside, they were both warm.

Finally, she pulled out the secret weapon: a guiso she had made that morning. Sofrito of red bell pepper, scallions, and a touch of hogao , cooked down to a sweet, savory paste. She stirred it into the broth, and the liquid turned from clear gold to a deep, inviting amber. It tasted of his mother’s patience

After twenty minutes, the chicken had given its all to the broth. Elena fished the pieces out, shredded the tender meat, and returned the bones to the pot for ten more minutes of sacrifice. She skimmed the golden fat from the top—not all of it, never all; fat is flavor—and then added the potatoes, corn, and a pinch of comino .

"Serve it," she said.