Spain Explained
While the word tapas may have gotten loose in the world, from London to Hong Kong, it is distinctly Spanish and distinctly different than what it has come to mean globally. Going out for tapas has its own verb in Spanish, tapear, and the full practice of drinking, eating tapas, and moving around has its own noun: el tapeo. Spain opened a formal UNESCO nomination file for the tradition in 2018. In other words, tapas are serious. This episode covers what tapas actually are, beyond the obvious answer. What constitutes a tapa? How does one enjoy them? Are they free? The real regional differences that make any single definition nearly useless: in parts of Andalucía a drink arrives with food automatically, no asking, no paying, while in the north the concept shifts into something with a completely different name and its own distinct rules. There's the ongoing and genuinely heated argument about whether the free tapa tradition is economically viable, with Spanish mayors publicly taking opposite sides. And there's the origin of the tapa, much disputed and with four royal origin legends, all set in Andalucía, that food historians are fairly skeptical of, alongside the 1904 travel memoir from Seville that gives us the most solid documentary evidence for how the word got attached to food in the first place. If you want more about Spain: ∙ Subscribe to Marti's Substack at https://substack.com/@martibuckley [https://substack.com/@martibuckley] ∙ Follow her on Instagram @martibuckley [https://www.instagram.com/martibuckley/] ∙ Visit her blog at travelcookeat.com [https://www.travelcookeat.com]
19 episodios
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