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AUTHENTIC PAN-LATIN CUISINE

BY CHEFMaricel Presilla

In 2000, Cuban-born business partners and friends chef Maricel E. Presilla and Clara Chaumont decided to open a casual Latin restaurant near their homes in Hudson County. Hoboken, a small town on the shores of the Hudson River with a lively night scene and populated by young professionals who like to eat out, seemed the perfect choice.

 

Since its opening on a cold January morning in 2000, Zafra has become a popular destination for those looking for delicious Latin food. A combination of vibrant oil paintings by Cuban artist Ismael Espinosa and colorful oilcloth tablecloths carry a dual message: Zafra's food is as serious as great Latin art, but its mood is as casual and welcoming as a popular Latin kitchen. The menu, based on Maricel's trips throughout Latin America is pan-Latin with dishes so authentic and vivid that you feel transported to Latin America when you eat them.

 

Designed to provide service from morning until late to a diverse clientele that ranges from locals to New Yorkers, Zafra is open seven days a week for breakfast, lunch, and dinner. Zafra also serves brunch from morning 'till mid-afternoon on both Saturdays and Sundays. The restaurant is BYOB and the staff will concoct delicious Latin cocktails and a terrific tropical sangria for your table. But if you want to sample the essence of Latin America's rich beverage tradition, look at the last page of the menu and choose from a broad selection of non-alcoholic drinks: fizzy Cuban chicha and Mexican tepache (fermented drinks made with pineapple peel), nutty almond horchata, deep purple and fruity purple corn chicha from Peru, refreshing Costa Rican sorrel punch, the house's special frozen Ecuadorian limeade and the best spiced hot chocolate around made with complex Venezuelan chocolate.

 

For such a small place, Zafra has attracted remarkable attention. It was rated Excellent by the New York Times, which is equivalent to a three-star rating in neighboring Manhattan, and has obtained high marks from all New Jersey publications and the Zagat survey. In 2005, the late R.W. Apple wrote a two-page feature article about Zafra and its sister restaurant Cucharamama in the New York Times. It was the greatest compliment Maricel and Clara could had hoped to obtain for their tiny Zafra. In his honor, we have dubbed a sampling-portion combination of fresh Cuban tamal, Cuban beef hash, and rice with black beans, “The Full Apple.” 

 

Zafra is a busy little place. It offers take-out food and does catering for small or large parties. Click here to contact us about reservations and catering.

 

Click here to read an interesting story about the paintings showcased in Zafra.

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