Classroom lesson · Food · 🇩🇴 Dominican Republic

Plantain & Mangú

The Dominican Republic's most comforting breakfast dish

Photo · Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

Mangú is the Dominican Republic's most beloved breakfast: boiled green plantains mashed until smooth, then topped with sautéed onions in vinegar and a splash of olive oil. It looks a little like mashed potato but has a slightly earthy, starchy flavour all its own. Most Dominican families eat it at least a few times a week.

Tell me more

Plantains look like large, thick bananas but they taste completely different. A ripe banana is soft and sweet and you can eat it raw. A green plantain is firm, starchy and slightly bitter — it must be cooked before you can eat it. The same plantain, if left to ripen until very yellow or black, becomes sweet and can be fried into little caramelised slices called tostones or maduros.

To make mangú, green plantains are boiled until tender, then mashed with water and a knob of butter or a drizzle of olive oil until the mixture is very smooth. The topping of vinegary onions is called 'los tres golpes' when served alongside fried salami, fried cheese and fried eggs — the complete classic Dominican breakfast.

Plantains are grown all over the Dominican Republic and are used in many different ways throughout the day: as mangú for breakfast, as fried tostones with lunch, as sweet maduros with dinner, or even as plantain chips for a snack.

Plantains are full of potassium, fibre and complex carbohydrates, making them a nutritious and filling staple. They have fed Caribbean communities for hundreds of years and remain central to Dominican identity and pride.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01The same plantain tastes completely different depending on when you eat it. Can you think of any other foods that change flavour as they ripen?
  2. 02Why might a starchy, filling breakfast like mangú be perfect for a busy day?
  3. 03If 'los tres golpes' means 'the three hits', what three things in your own breakfast could you give a fun nickname?
Try this

Classroom activity

Design a 'breakfast from another country' menu card for mangú. Include the dish name in Spanish, draw the plate with all components labelled, list the main ingredients, and write one sentence explaining why it is a good breakfast using at least one nutrition fact.