Traditionally a Jamaican cuisine based on Rastafarian beliefs, Ital food has reached other countries as well. Guyana, a small country along the north coast of South America, is one of them. In Georgetown, the capital, you’ll find a couple of restaurants serving Ital food. One of them is the “House of Flavour”. 

Ital food is based on Rastafarian beliefs and is vegan and macrobiotic. It excludes meat, dairy, salt, and additives and focuses on fresh, seasonal plant foods such as fruits, vegetables, and legumes all enriched with spices and herbs. And House of Flavour, manned by the Captain, dishes out delectable Ital cuisine daily.

Eighteen years ago, Desmond – “Just call me ‘Captain’, everybody does” – opened his restaurant in downtown Georgetown. He worked as a fisherman on a shrimp trawler and had never cooked a meal in his life but he wanted to do something else: start his own business. “So, every day I strolled through the market, asking vendors and buyers what to cook with the fresh produce,” he explained. “That’s how I learned. I know all the vendors and know exactly who is selling what at what price.”

And House of Flavour was born. The restaurant, which doubles as a music store run by the captain’s wife, is open every day of the week except on Sundays and holidays. Captain starts cooking at three am and all dishes are daily prepared from scratch. No leftovers, nothing in the freezer. “That doesn’t do the food any good,” he commented. 

He starts serving at 7.30 am and continues until the food runs out. You’ll find a few choices on the menu:

– A meal for 200, 300, or 500 Guyanese dollars (approx. the equivalent of 1, 1.5, 2.5 US dollars, making it the cheapest restaurant in town).

– A meal served in a calabash – to be eaten in the restaurant – or in a Styrofoam container to take away.

For the 300 and 500 versions you get every dish on the menu of that day: rice, dhal, and all seven side dishes. The 200 choice includes rice, dhal, and two side dishes. All meals are served with chutney and you can order an additional fresh juice, made from local fruits to which ginger and/or lemon may have been added. [pagebreak]

On the day we visited, we found two staples, rice and chickpeas, served up in a variety of ways. The latter were cooked to make a delicious curry called curry channa. For my 200 dollar, small portion I ate up curry and another side dish, which generally is a mixture of a second legume and a green vegetable. 

My partner Coen, with a much bigger stomach, opted for the bigger version. For 300 Guyanese dollars he feasted on rice and dhal and a scoop of chunks (the local name for soya that is bought in dried form and soaked before turned into a dish) and vegetable dishes such as corilla (a spinach-type leaf), ochro (okra), and bora (green). The finishing touch was a spoonful of homemade chutney, called mango achar.

Only after a couple of weeks I learned that one of the pillars of Ital food is that it’s salt-free. As a self-proclaimed addict, I was shocked. I never missed it! Of course, the tropical region has the advantage of having an abundance of spices and condiments to flavor the food, among which curry and peppers, (although at House of Flavour the food isn’t particularly spicy). 

Thyme is a popular condiment as a salt substitute, and apart from onion and garlic, Desmond uses a spice called married-man-pork, the intriguing name Guyanese gave to sweet basil. Every day I wonder how he does it, cooking such a variety of purely plant-based dishes. The food is tasty, wholesome, and nutritious. When in the neighborhood, give it a try. 

House of Flavours: 177 Charlotte Street, Georgetown, Guyana

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