Category Archives: Food

Supermercado Wimpys – El primero del país


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Por ELADIO PICHARDO

10 julio, 2010 8:22 pm

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Casi al final de la férrea tiranía de Rafael Trujillo, cuando  los dominicanos  estaban acostumbrados a comprar  productos en ventorrillos, pulperías y colmados, abrió sus puertas en Santo Domingo el supermercado Wimpys,  primer establecimiento en esa modalidad con el objetivo de ofertar mercancía fresca y a buen precio.

Lo que era una atracción y novedad en ese momento por sus características y funcionalidad, hoy se puede ver como un pequeño negocio, comparado con los nuevos supermercados ubicados en gigantescas plazas que ofrecen de todo para el hogar.

El Wimpys, que permaneció 11 años en la avenida Bolívar, al lado del Colegio del Apostolado, en Gascue, tenía a acondicionador de aire  central, lo que hacía más atractivo que tanto amas de casa como profesionales, trujillistas y antitrujillistas, visitaran sus instalaciones, pues algunas amistades y familiares por la situación que se vivía en el país  pocas veces se podían reunir.

Historia.  Ese primer supermercado, al estilo estaounidense, comenzó  en 1958. Su propietario, el norteamericano Lorenzo  Berry (Wimpy), con la visión de hacer un buen negocio en esa modalidad, lo instaló con una inversión de RD$75,000, aportados también por varios de sus accionistas.

La idea del supermercado comenzó a desarrollarse luego  que el señor Berry contrajera nupcias con la dominicana Flérida Yabra. Para esa época él era piloto de la desaparecida Compañía Dominicana de Aviación (CDA),  que le contrató.

La casa donde residían, contiguo al igualmente desaparecido Hipódromo Perla Antillana, la utilizaron también para poner una pequeña tienda con un cuarto frío con carnes, vegetales congelados, pan y cake´s holsom americanos, entre otros productos.

Tras el nacimiento de sus dos hijos, Yabra, inquieta por los riesgos que existían, dada la tensa situación política, le pidió a su esposo dejar su carrera. Ella, con su experiencia comercial, habiendo trabajado y ayudado a su padre en una tienda de telas en la avenida Mella, también le sugirió ampliar el negocio para así  estar juntos por más tiempo.

La idea se concretó y  decidieron abrir el supermercado, un tipo de comercio novedoso y atractivo para el país en ese momento.

Las mercancías.  Además de los productos que los dominicanos estaban acostumbrados a comprar, como arroz, habichuelas, café, vegetales, carnes, pescado, el supermercado Wimpys importaba directamente o vía sus representantes en el país otros productos de EE.UU., Europa y Japón.

Tenía en existencia aproximadamente 7,000 artículos, e importaron por primera vez la línea  de cereales Kellogg´s, pero asimismo los clientes encontraban cereales Post y  General Mills.

Desde  EE.UU., gran parte de las mercancías era traída a través de Associated Grocers of Florida,  compañía con  variedad de artículos que suplía a  grandes supermercados de Miami.

También lo hacía la Smith, Richardson & Conroy, empresa especializada en productos congelados de excelente calidad, como carne de res grado Prime y Choice de ganado Angus; aves, jamones y embutidos.

Desde Miami, vía la Prawn Seafood, importaban camarones, cangrejos y pescado congelado, así como otras delicias del mar.

Desde Europa, por la Agencia La Bourdette, adquirían diversos productos, entre ellos, vinos, queso fresco, pescado y jamón tipo parma enlatado, pastas, frutas y vegetales, con una buena aceptación por los dominicanos.

Los panes y cake´s holsum y vegetales congelados, así como otras mercancías llegaban  dos veces por semana, por avión.

Entre las personalidades que visitaban el supermercado se encontraba el general Juan Perón, ex presidente de Argentina, quien había expresado a los propietarios que su día no era completo en la República Dominicana si no  iba al Wimpys a tomarse un café y a platicar con ellos.

El negocio del señor Berry tenía una gran cantidad de clientes de diferentes clases sociales, entre los que estaban políticos, pintores, músicos, empresarios y peloteros, quienes adquirían los artículos alimenticios a buenos precios.

Contrataron desde Estados Unidos al carnicero Jimmy Gunn, quien entrenó al señor Berry y a los empleados del área de carnicería para que aprendieran los cortes de la carne de vaca, la que Fernando Léon producía en exclusividad para el supermercado.

Para educar al cliente en la preparación de los cortes de la carne, Flérida elaboraba tarjetas de 3 x 5 pulgadas con las recetas e instrucciones de cómo preparar y cocinar.

Fin del negocio.  Posterior a la muerte de Rafael Trujillo, el supermercado Wimpys, que tenía como gerente general a Freddy Yabra, tuvo grandes dificultades, entre ellas el bloqueo para obtener los permisos de importación de productos y equipos para el reacondicionamiento del negocio, lo que, eventualmente, disminuyó su dinamismo.

Esas dificultades, unidas a un fuego que destruyó gran parte del supermercado, hicieron que el señor Berry no continuara con el establecimiento y cerrara sus puertas en 1969.

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Vida de Wimpy

Lorenzo Berry nació en  1919 en  Miami. Al estallar la Segunda Guerra Mundial, siendo piloto, se integró al ejército de Estados Unidos.  Luego de  terminada la guerra regresó a Miami, donde  trabajó como piloto instructor. Eventualmente, junto a otros pilotos de EE.UU. con experiencia militar eran traídos a República Dominicana para entrenar a los pilotos de la Fuerza Aérea. Fue contratado por la CDA, donde siguió la carrera de piloto hasta retirarse en 1957 para empezar su nueva vida de empresario, la que  continúa  a sus 91 años de edad. Procreó con su esposa a Lorenzo y  Jeffrey.

Las claves

El primero

De acuerdo con el historiador Bernardo Vega, uno de los grandes cambios que trajo    fue el concepto de  supermercado en contraste con los colmados tradicionales. “El colmado más grande de la época era la Casa Velázquez, pero además el Wimpys fue el primer establecimiento que se instaló en Santo Domingo  en la modalidad de supermercado, a donde acudían personas de clases media y alta”.

Fuente


Fine Dining and Traditional Food in Santo Domingo

Fabio Parasecoli

Associate professor and coordinator of food studies, New School – NYC

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Posted: 02/01/2013 5:17 pm
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Carne & Co. is where gourmets can find good, local meat, great charcuterie, and all sorts of delicious stuff in Santo Domingo, the capital of the Dominican Republic. It was the perfect place for me to give a talk about food in movies to a small group of food professionals, from producers to restaurant owners, including the publisher of the beautiful magazine Gastroteca. The talk soon turned into a very animated round table about Dominican food traditions, the Dominican Republic’s future, and the cultural and social issues that influence (or limit) the country’s development. As a visitor, the conversation gave me a better understanding of a culinary world that is rich, complex, and in transition. Of course, we just got to scratch the surface.

This was my second visit to Santo Domingo. With 34.4 percent of the population under the poverty line, I was stunned by the number of elegant and upscale restaurants. With a population of around three million people (a huge percentage of the over nine millions of Dominicans living in the country), the city has developed an interesting food scene, although many cannot afford its prices and, among those who can, few even consider the cultural aspects of the culinary scene.

The participants in the round table all agreed that most Dominicans of means have no interest in eating traditional Dominican food when they go out. They prefer imported ingredients, refined environments, and international dishes. Everybody at the table had a different opinion on why this is. Some hinted at provincialism within the local elites, who consider everything from abroad as better and more prestigious. A restaurateur even said that, at times, she needs to give English names to the dishes on her menu for patrons to be interested. Others blamed a lack of good ingredients on the local market.

Everybody was fast in underlining that the problem is not insufficient production, but rather the fact that the best fruits and produce are all exported, as the local buyers do not ensure enough volume of trade. Moreover, producers make more money by exporting. This is particularly true when it comes to organic food. For example, the Dominican Republic has become a major producer of organic bananas, but most of the crop is exported, mostly to the European Union and Japan.

The participants were well aware that they are catering to a minority of the population, and that their preferences and taste might be influenced by their exposure to the global trends in world cuisines. They all admitted to feeling an emotional bond with crops and dishes that constitute the core of Dominican culinary traditions. However, those dishes belong to the domestic sphere, and most people have easy access to them at home. So what would be the point to pay more in a restaurant for the same food you could have at home? Unless you play with it, make it sexier, more contemporary and, why not, ironic…

This kind of approach could be particularly interesting in restaurants, hotels, and resorts with large numbers of foreign customers. Many international visitors still prefer to stick to familiar food, which justifies the presence of global mainstays such as pizza and hamburgers — at times quite bland and non-descript — in tourist destinations all over the world, from Thailand to Tunisia. (The impact of tourism on food systems and the potential of food to develop forms of sustainable tourism, deserves its own discussion and will be addressed in a future course for the Food Studies program at The New School.) However, a growing segment of high-end tourism is showing interest in food and eating as an essential element of traveling, and more and more visitors want to enjoy local fare as part of their experience. Media has changed the perception of the role food now plays in establishing one’s sense of cosmopolitanism and cultural capital.

Of course, revisited traditional food should also be presented in ways that respond to the expectations and standards of high-end travelers. This move would require a lot of rethinking and experimentation, and institutional investments would be necessary to sustain and promote such initiatives. At the same time, this new approach would imply deep changes in social relationships on the islands, so that the foods of the majority of the population — and not its richest part — are reevaluated and not just left aside as leftovers of an embarrassing and unglamorous past.

Source

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TASTE SANTO DOMINGO 2012

Industry: Events
18 -20 October, Santo Domingo will host in the hotels Renaissance Jaragua and Melia Taste Santo Domingo 2012: a feast for professionals and students of food and beverage industry and wine and food enthusiasts from Dominican Republic

(TRAVPR.COM) UK – August 6th, 2012 –

August 01st 2012. Contacts: Creato / (809) 508-7706 / media@tastesantodomingo.com

18 -20 October, Santo Domingo will host in the hotels Renaissance Jaragua and Melia Taste Santo Domingo 2012: a feast for professionals and students of food and beverage industry and wine and food enthusiasts from Dominican Republic and more than 20 countries.

Santo Domingo. On days 18, 19 and 20 October in the Renaissance Jaragua Hotel and Melia Santo Domingo, Santo Domingo will host Taste again in its fifth version. This year the event increases in duration and size, settling for 3 days in the hotels mentioned and occupying more than 5 spaces simultaneously to provide a full schedule of presentations and events for professionals and students of food and beverage industry and enthusiasts food and expected to participate over 150 companies and more than four thousand (4,000) attendees.

Additionally, the organizers intend to incorporate skills in various disciplines of culinary arts, a new series of special events including Tastings, Dinners, Private Events and Awards and the participation of important international and local figures joined the program. All information about the event and how to participate will be available on the official website of the event http://www.tastesantodomingo.com the central point of information on events, personalities and companies and brands participants and where visitors can view a video of the 2011 event highlights.

This year in its 5th edition, the 1st Culinary Cup of the Americas will be held sponsored by Nestle Professional. More than 20 countries are invited to participate with teams representing them in this competition of Professional, junior and Pastry categories with over USD 6,000 in Prize Money.

Also, the communication company CLARO will present 2 culinary stars of the famous gastronomy channel elgourmet.com on live presentations of their popular TV shows.

Tickets to the event will be available beginning August1 in presale. The organizers undertake a joint presentation to the media and participating companies to make the long-awaited details of Taste 2012.

Background.

The event begins with its first edition on October 28, 2009 organized by the company Creato. Since then he has been sponsored by the Ministry of Tourism of the Dominican Republic, Claro, Nestle, and E. Mercasid Leon Jimenez. The event takes place thanks to the collaboration and sponsorship of major schools, organizations, companies, institutions involved in the field of gastronomy in the Dominican Republic. In December 2010, and again in 2011 Taste Santo Domingo is referred to by the Listin Diario in its articles of food as the event most important for national and international hit.

· Made three consecutive years (2009, 2010.2011) in Santo Domingo and Punta Cana (June 2010).

· More than 100 local and international companies participated in 2011.§

· More than 2,000 professionals, students and food enthusiasts in the activities of 2011.

· Consolidation as the main culinary event 2011 in the Caribbean region.

· Unprecedented multimedia spectrum.

· More than 20,000 unique visitors during 2011 in the event’s official website: http://www.tastesantodomingo.com

· More than 20 specialists on the scene for two days in 2011.

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CONTACT INFORMATION:
Contact Name: Esther Smith – Esther C Smith
Phone #: 441962711239
Email: pr.uk@godominicanrepublic.com
Web:
Please contact the person or company listed above for information regarding the content of this press release. TravPR.com are not the issuers of this press release and are not responsible for the accuracy of the content.

Source

The Dominican Republic increases greenhouse area significantly

The Dominican Republic produces vegetables under protected environment throughout the country, due to an impressive agribusiness park growth of more than 1.912 percent.

This greenhouse infrastructure growth has enabled the country to increase production significantly, and improve foreign exchange earnings thanks to vegetable exports. In 2004 the country had 26.9 hectares of greenhouses now it has increased by 504.2 hectares.

This has been proportional to the extraordinary growth that has occurred in the production of vegetables in greenhouses, obtaining more than 4.6 million pounds in 2004.

89,374,248 pounds in 2011, with an increase of 85,368,048 pounds.

While in 2004 3,303,960 pounds were exported, in 2011 the volume reached 64,253,386, an increase of 60,949,426 pounds.

The amount of vegetables produced under controlled environments in 2004 had a foreign exchange income of just USD 1,318,873, while in 2011 profits reached USD 58,519,624, for a foreign currency increase of USD 57,200,751. In 2004 sales of vegetables produced in greenhouses were about 702,000,240 pounds, which generated 8.5 million pesos.

However, production in 2011 was of 25,120,862 pounds, for an increase of 24,418,622 pounds, with revenues of more than 539 million pesos. The increase was of 531 million pesos. This significant increase in vegetable production in a protected environment has been possible by the support of the government of President Leonel Fernandez, through the Ministry of Agriculture, to producers working under that mode of production.

This new agricultural production system has allowed to ensure high productivity with  safe-quality items and good profitability.

Sustained growth in this period is evident in the number of square meters of greenhouse throughout the national territory, the volume of production, exports, foreign exchange earned for the country thanks to exports and local sales, as well as the generation of employees throughout the production process.

Among the items that are grown in greenhouses include bell peppers, cubanela, spicy, table and cherry tomatoes, cucumber, melon, among others.

Exports go to markets in the U.S., Canada, the Netherlands,the  UK, Germany, Italy,
France, Switzerland, Spain, Portugal, Greece, Australia, Belgium, and Caribbean islands.

Source: SEA

Publication date: 5/9/2012

Source

For Haiti, Some Neighborly Help From Next-Door

For Haiti, Some Neighborly Help From Next-Door

January 20, 2010

 Volunteers at work Monday at the Centro Bono, a Jesuit organization in Santo Domingo.
Volunteers at work Monday at the Centro Bono, a Jesuit organization in Santo Domingo. The organization is sending medicine, food, blankets, clothing, shoes and water to Haiti.

John Burnett/NPR

Complete NPR Coverage

January 20, 2010

In an unprecedented gesture of neighborliness, the Dominican Republic has opened its border to injured Haitians. Traditionally, relations between the two countries are strained at best. Now there are fresh hopes that things could improve.

Many injured Haitians are being treated at the Dario Contreras public hospital in the capital, Santo Domingo. Forlorn Haitians of all ages lie in hospital beds that line the corridors of the hospital, their gruesome wounds bandaged, their arms attached to IV bags.

Dominican Republic President Leonel Fernandez was the first head of state to visit Haiti after the Jan. 12 quake, and he has pledged his country’s support for the reconstruction effort.

“I never thought the Dominican president would do this,” said a 50-year-old Haitian woman who came to the hospital with hopes of finding her mother, who has not been heard from since the earthquake. “He extended his hand to Haitians. He’s shown that he loves the people of Haiti.”

All over town, Dominicans are bringing relief supplies into collection centers to be loaded onto trucks that will make the six-hour overland journey to Port-au-Prince. At Centro Bono, a Jesuit charity, volunteers pack boxes full of penicillin, canned food, toilet paper, shoes, baby food and water.

Haiti is a poor black country, French-speaking, basically living on subsistence agriculture. The Dominican Republic — Spanish, Latin, export-focused economy, tourism. You couldn’t have had two more different worlds and they meet at the border.

No one remembers an outpouring like this before, not even when Haiti got hit by four tropical storms in 2008 and its flooded towns begged for assistance.

But the earthquake is different, said Sonia Adames, director of the Jesuit aid center.

“Truly there is a lot of prejudice toward Haiti in the Dominican Republic. But this earthquake that has physically shaken Haiti has also shaken Dominican society. People have their hearts in their hands,” Adames said.

Despite this momentary outbreak of brotherly love, the old fears are there, she said.

Indeed, in the narrow streets of the capital’s old Spanish colonial sector, the earthquake has heightened age-old worries of a human stampede from Haiti that could overwhelm the Dominican Republic and dilute its Hispanic culture.

Haitians make up 10 to 20 percent of the Dominican Republic’s 10 million people. They do the hard, low-paying labor such as sweeping streets, cutting sugar cane and laying bricks.

“We had lots of Haitian immigrants before, and now we’re going to have even more. And for good reason, because what happened was huge,” said Julio Cesar Rivera, who sells rosaries in front of the cathedral. “But we can’t absorb anymore. Our hospitals don’t have any more bed space. We need to help them, but we Dominicans need help, too.”

Hispaniola is the only island in the world shared by two countries that are so different, said Dan O’Neil. As director of the Pan American Development Foundation in Santo Domingo for the past 12 years, O’Neil spends equal time in both countries.

Map of Haiti

 “Haiti is a poor black country, French-speaking, basically living on subsistence agriculture. The Dominican Republic — Spanish, Latin, export-focused economy, tourism. You couldn’t have had two more different worlds and they meet at the border,” he said.

At the moment, the Dominican Republic is being transformed into a staging ground for the burgeoning Haitian relief effort, and it will continue to play this role during the long reconstruction process. With gridlock at Haiti’s airport, relief workers, journalists and now the U.S. military are streaming into the Dominican Republic’s airports.

“Of course, it will benefit the Dominican Republic,” said Rosa Maria Garcia, president of the Dominican-Haitian Chamber of Commerce.

“It’s already benefiting because everything is coming up through here. All the shops are selling more, all supermarkets are selling more. Because everybody who’s buying to help Haiti is buying in the Dominican commerce,” Garcia said.

Dominicans have long grimly observed Haiti’s seemingly endless misfortunes, but in the past week some have dared to think: Perhaps Haiti can rebuild and get a fresh start, and things will be different this time.

Because in the end, Dominicans know they cannot fully thrive unless their destitute neighbor comes along, too.

As they say here, the island of Hispaniola is a bird with two wings, a marriage without divorce.

Source: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=122733557 

PM Papandreou addresses SI’s Council

Greek Prime Minister, PASOK party leader and Socialist International (SI) President George Papandreou, addressing Monday morning’s session of the Socialist International’s Conference in Santo Domingo, in the Dominican Republic, stressed “the progressive and socialist forces have a great responsibility to forge ahead and be carriers of change today that the system has failed.”

    Papandreou further said that the economic crisis, the environmental crisis and the energy crisis require the deepening of democracy, the strengthening of social justice, green change and a new growth model to be tackled.

    He also referred to the “differences between progressive and conservative forces,” pointing out that for the “progressists the basic principle and credo is man first.”

    Focusing on the global economic crisis and its other parametres, the prime minister stressed that “unless it is intercepted and, on the contrary, the crisis continues, most indexes will worsen.” He further noted that global mutual dependence exists and all together are sharing the negative consequences of the crisis.

    Papandreou said that among the first priorities that must be set by the progressists and the socialists to enable many problems to he handled, is green growth, through which new investments can be made, agriculture and tourism to develop and ways of confronting unemployment to be found through them.

    The prime minister also referred to the “good work done by the Socialist International’s relevant committee on climatic change, work that shows the path to arrive from the economy of high pollutants to a society of low pollutants.”

    Papandreou also said that the economic crisis, the food crisis, the energy and environmental crisis constitute great threats for the planet, adding that they can create new tensions and conflicts in a new geopolitical reality.

    He also focused on the considerable repercussions of these crises on developing countries that were also struck by pandemics and which are aggravating the already existing crisis even more.

    He referred to data of the Internatiaonal Labour Organisation, stressing that according to them in 2009 the number of unemployed worldwide will increase by 18 to 30 million compared to 2007.

    According to one scenario, 200 million people from the developing countries might possibly be found under the poverty level and the largest part of them will be women and young people.

    In order for these problems to be tackled, Papandreou said that the big global players, as he termed the big countries that influence decisions most, must provide economic and development aid for the developing countries.

    Papandreou also underlined that progressive forces are committed absolutely not to tolerate unemployment, since labour is a top priority for these forces.

    He further noted that it should not be forgotten that in many cases the economic crisis has been used by conservative forces to curb social justice, social security, the welfare state and other social rights that the labour movement had achieved with many and longlasting struggles.

    The prime minister also commented on the election of Barack Obama which, as he said, “has boosted prospects for constructive global cooperation”.

    Lastly, Papandreou stressed the need for the deepening of democracy, adding that the SI must show its solidarity to those living in countries having authoritarian regimes, underlining that “democracy does not only mean elections every four years”.

 

Source: http://www.ana.gr/anaweb/user/showplain?maindoc=8169906&maindocimg=8169725&service=6