Classroom lesson · La Bandera · 🇩🇴 Dominican Republic

La Bandera

The everyday Dominican lunch named after the national flag

Photo · Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

La Bandera — which means 'the flag' in Spanish — is the classic everyday lunch of the Dominican Republic. It is a plate of white rice, red beans (stewed in a rich sauce) and a portion of meat. The three sections of the plate, in red and white, remind Dominicans of the colours of their national flag.

Tell me more

The name comes from the way the food looks on the plate: the white rice and red beans sit side by side, echoing the red and white on the Dominican flag. It is a simple, honest and beautiful idea — the national flag represented by the national meal.

The beans are stewed slowly with sofrito — a fragrant mixture of garlic, onion, peppers and herbs — until the sauce is deep red and the beans are perfectly tender. Pouring a spoonful of this rich bean sauce over white rice is one of the great pleasures of Dominican cooking.

The meat portion can be chicken, beef, pork or fish depending on the family's preference and budget. It is usually sautéed or braised with garlic, oregano and lime juice — simple seasonings that bring out the natural flavour of whatever is being cooked.

La Bandera is eaten for lunch in homes, schools and restaurants across the country every single day. It is deeply nourishing — the combination of rice and beans together provides all the amino acids (the building blocks of protein) that the body needs, even without meat.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01How do you think it makes people feel to eat a meal that is named after and looks like their national flag?
  2. 02Lunch is the biggest meal of the day in the Dominican Republic. Is that the same in your country, or is dinner the main meal? Why might cultures differ?
  3. 03Rice and beans together make a complete protein. How does knowing the science of food help us understand why it has been eaten for so many generations?
Try this

Classroom activity

Design a meal named after your country's flag. Think about what colours are in the flag, then choose real foods of those colours. Draw the plate, label each food, and write a sentence explaining the connection between the food and the flag.