Are you looking to add a little oomph to a pot of beans? Give more depth of flavor to a stew? Jazz up a sauce? What you need is a little culantro. No, not cilantro. Culantro.
Culantro is an herb that hails from the Caribbean and is a wonderful flavor booster. What is culantro exactly? Let's take a closer look at this tropical herb you didn't know you needed.
What is culantro?
Culantro is a green herb with long serrated leaves that is native to the Americas. It is widely used in the Caribbean to spruce up anything from rice and beans to a pot of chicken soup. It has a faint smell of cilantro but a more robust flavor. Culantro is also used in several Asian countries including Vietnam and Thailand.
Other common names for culantro are sawtooth coriander, serrated coriander, recao (Puerto Rico), chadron benee (Dominica), shado beni and bhandhania (Trinidad and Tobago), coulante (Haiti), and fit weed (Guyana).