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Grace Coconut Tuna Stew

This quick and easy dish can be prepared in a jiffy with basic staples in almost every pantry.

Preparation Time: 5 mins. | Cook Time: 10 hours

Ingredients:

2 cans Grace Tuna (drained)
1 ½ cups of water
½ cup of Grace salad cream
4 teaspoon of Grace Coconut Powder
2 teaspoon of Malher Consome
1 packet Malher Black Pepper
1 packet Malher Garlic Powder
1 small green pepper (diced)
1 small onion (diced)
3 sprigs of Cilantro (chopped)
Grace Coconut Oil
Grace Habanero Pepper Sauce (optional)

Directions:

Mix Grace Coconut Powder in warm Water and  add Grace Salad Cream, set aside.  Glaze pot with Grace Coconut Oil and keep on Medium heat.  Add Sweet Pepper, Onion and Cilantro and stir for about one minute.  Stir in liquid mixture.  Add Grace Tuna.  Add Malher Black Pepper, Malher Garlic Powder and Malher Consome.  Continue to stir for 3 – 5 minutes until thicken.

Serve on Grace Coconut White Rice, Pasta or with Flour or Corn Tortillas.

Note: Recipe courtesy GraceKennedy (Belize) Limited.

Grace Coconut Paletas

Try this refreshing spin on Popsicles. It certainly puts a Belizean flavor into this summer favorite.

Preparation Time: 10 mins. | Set Time: 4 hours

Ingredients:

2 sachets Grace Coconut Milk Powder
1 ½ cup Warm Water
½ cup Grace Evaporated Milk
½ cup Grace Condensed Milk
½ tsp Benjamins Vanilla Essence
1 cup Ice

Directions:

Pour warm water in a mug.  Mix in Grace Coconut Milk Powder until dissolved thoroughly.  Add Grace Evaporated Milk, Grace Condensed Milk and Benjamins Essence. Stir in Ice until melted.  Pour into Popsicle mold and freeze for 4 hours or until frozen.

Note: Recipe courtesy GraceKennedy (Belize) Limited.

Belize Kolcha – Carnival

Take a look at the history of carnival in Belize.

Ceviche de Atun

This new and exciting recipe will definitely cure your craving for seafood.  The delectable Caribbean flavor will have you going back for more.  Try it today as an appetizer or finger food.  It’s a recipe all your friends and family will love.

Preparation Time: 15 mins. | Cook Time: 10 mins.

Ingredients:

2 cans of Grace tuna in water (drained)
1 sweet pepper, medium (diced)
2 medium tomatoes (diced)
1 medium onion (diced)
1 small carrot (diced)
6 lemons (juice)
4 sprigs Cilantro (finely chopped)
1/2 teaspoon black pepper Malher
1 pinch of salt
1 teaspoon Malher garlic powder
1 tablespoon Grace habanero sauce
Flakes of corn tortillas, brown and crisp

Directions:

In a bowl, combine all the vegetables, add lemon juice, Mahler black pepper, Mahler garlic powder, salt and Grace habanero pepper sauce, mix well. Add Grace tuna and stir.

Serve with tortilla chips.

Note: Recipe courtesy GraceKennedy (Belize) Limited.

Record number of Manatees spotted off the coast of Belize

A new scientific survey has returned with good news for one of the ocean’s most loveable creatures – the endangered Antillean manatee is making a comeback in its Belizean home waters.

An Oceanic Society team led by Dr Holly Edwards spotted a record number of manatees during an aerial survey over Belize’s Turneffe Atoll. Combined with results from a coastal survey undertaken by Belize’s Coastal Zone Management’s Nicole Auil Gomez, 507 manatees have now been sighted.

The team said that as more manatees exist than the number seen, and considering that less than 2,500 adult Antillean manatees are believed to exist worldwide, the survey results are heartening.

The results also prove that Belize’s efforts to protect the gentle, shy “sea cow” are working.

Antillean manatees, also called Caribbean manatees, are found throughout Caribbean coastal areas and the Gulf of Mexico. Usually found near fresh water sources, they graze on sea grass and were once a prized food source in some cultures. The survey team said that finding such a number of manatees at Turneffe, which has no fresh water sources, made the find that much more intriguing.

Public awareness campaigns and legislation has effectively ended the use of manatee as food in Belize, but the creatures are still at risk from accidental collisions with boats, entrapment in fishing gear, and the degradation of their habitats.

According to a Huffington Post blog from Dr Bryan Wallace, chief scientist of the non-profit Oceanic Society, “The surveys help scientists learn the manatees’ travel patterns and habitat use in Belize, which can be used to guide boat traffic routes to reduce collisions with manatees, as well as other management issues.”

Dr Wallace pointed out that while Turneffe remains threatened by climate change, overfishing, and invasive species and that “the drumbeat for big-dollar, unsustainable development projects is growing louder by the day,” there is a bright side. “Multiple stakeholders from fishing communities, ecotourism companies, conservation groups, and government managers are developing a conservation management strategy for Turneffe. These efforts are encouraging, but have a long way to go,” he said.

By:  

Source:  Costa Rica Star

An Anglers Fishing Adventure starts in BELIZE!

Beneath Belize’s turquoise Caribbean waters and crystal clear rivers exists a thriving fish population, among other spectacular sea life. Both professional and leisure anglers traveling to Belize will find that their experience on our waters will be one for the records!

Popular species of fish in Belize, such as the, snapper, snook, bonefish, jacks, and barracuda, are always eager for a bite and a fight.  On your Belize Fishing Tour, take a moment to relish in the tranquility of the open Caribbean Sea, steady river streams and lagoons while enjoying great conversations.

In Belize anglers hoping to make a grand or super slam will find that it is attainable and for those seeking other fishing challenges, sign up for one of the many fishing competitions around-town.  Upcoming fishing tournaments include the “Tres Pescados-Fly Fishing Tournament” in Ambergris-San Pedro Caye, August 23 – 25, 2012. The 14th Annual Placencia, Belize Tourism Industry Association (BTIA) Salt Water Fishing Tournament, September 7-9.

Another popular fishing competition is, the “El Pescador-Grand Slam Tagging Invitational”, which will be held during January 24 – 26, 2013.

Choose from “salt water flats fishing”, fly-fishing, blind casting, snorkeling (spear-in-hand) and more.

As a relatively small country, approximately 8,867 square miles, Belize’s wealth is in its diverse attractions, its many remote private and commercial cayes, friendly people and its historical mystique. Tour guides will aid anglers in locating the prime fishing areas, along our Barrier Reef, around the Port of Honduras or in one of our rivers.

Eco-friendly anglers can also enjoy catch-and-release fishing in Marine Reserve areas. A full-day of trawling adventures on the waters is great for connecting with mother-nature, and a bonding time for fishing lovers of all ages. See why Belize is the best place to be every season!

Source:  BelizeHub

Adventure Meets Luxury in Belize

Just over two hours south of the U.S. and virtually untouched,
pristine Belize is paradise, concentrated

by Skip Knowles

The fellow in the plane seat next to mine had the look of a successful middle-aged broker, and smiled self-consciously as he told how he’d come to acquire a 100-acre fruit farm and a house in Belize.

On his first visit, he was sucked in by the Caribbean culture of the British protectorate.

“The people are extremely friendly,” he said. “They are not like everywhere else, where people just look at Americans as money.”

Then, while exploring, he found a patch of tepid jungle for sale far inland near the Guatemalan border for a steal. Not exactly coastal paradise, but an adventure-venture. Thrilled, he made the down payment using traveler’s checks, wiring the rest later.

He started planting fruit trees, and bought a house in the city, too, all for a fraction of stateside values. So my next question – whether he thought Belize is more like Costa Rica now or Costa Rica past – was fairly foregone.

“Much more like Costa 20 years ago,” he said.

Belize: Boating OpportunityLike everyone else, I came to Placencia, Belize for the water, fly rod in hand, but would soon fantasize about buying my own escape hatch to paradise.

If you fly fish, you have to go to Belize, the way surfers must see Pipeline and golfers must play Pebble. And yes, I’d leave with memories of shallow flats more alive with fish than I’d ever seen. But what makes you want to stay are mental snapshots of friendly smiles and a place unspoiled. Of rainforest hikes, beachside hammocks, island-hopping to tranquil bars, ice-cold cocktails under palm trees, pastel-painted boats waving as you pass. Hiking Mayan ruins and secluded waterfalls, jaguar preserves and unnamed caves. Empty beaches surrounding lagoons full of water clear as glass, thriving with sea turtles and manatees, animals endangered nearly everywhere else on the planet. Lagoons that open up to the second largest coral reef on earth.

Belize is a step back in time to the pristine. Like Costa Rica, only with a population of 274,000, not four million.

Not that the fishing was off. It almost never is. In fact, catching your first of the three prized flats species (tarpon, bonefish and permit) in Belize is practically considered cheating by some fly-fishers.

I wanted a permit, the huge, blunt-faced phantom fish of the flats, a powerhouse creature as unstoppable when hooked as they are difficult to stalk. I’d fished for years in the Florida Keys, where hunting for the spooky permit is akin to searching for unicorns, and seen only one.

Ah, Belize. Twenty minutes after we’d left Placencia and just five minutes after we stopped the boat on day one, our guide, Lloyd, was pointing to silvery permit fins flashing in the sun as they fed in two feet of water. I could not believe my eyes. We had shots at four permit schools in half an hour, before switching to bonefish.

Ten minutes into his bone fishing career, my partner nailed a nice three-pounder on the fly. That was just a teaser. The next morning, miles offshore, in just 12 inches of water, the first permit I cast to chased my crab-fly nearly to my rod tip. We saw 70-plus total (enough to cause full apoplexy), while turtles, spotted eagle rays, boxfish, huge schools of jacks and stingrays cruised past.

Belize: Fishing OpportunityWe caught too many fish to remember them all. Lloyd, a local legend, is always booked, most likely because of his deep passion as much as fish-finding skills. Most guides instruct your casting in a mellow soft voice, like they’re talking to pre-schoolers. But Lloyd is still freaked out about catching fish, and his voice gets higher and faster the closer you are to the target: “Right there. No! Right there! No-no! YES! RIGHT THERE!”

Life affords few second chances, but this amazing, tiny, English-speaking country, with a Caribbean soul and a lovely Spanish accent, seems to be one of them. Venture to the best parts of the gorgeous Caribbean with an eye toward real estate and it’s possible to feel like maybe you’re a little late. In Belize, you soon feel you’ve been granted another chance.

And not just for land. There is luxury to be found. Purple flowers lined the walkway to my luxury villas at Chabil Mar, an intimate-sized upscale vacation lifestyle development widely regarded as the most luxurious in the small fishing village of Placencia. The gleaming rich indigenous-wood floors, doors and furniture give the spacious rooms the feeling of being in a giant yacht cabin.

New villas sold out quickly, and can now be reserved as vacation rentals. Dianne Bulman who built and developed Chabil Mar calls Belize the “land of opportunity, where anything is possible,” and it is hard not to agree. Each night, I threw open the French doors and let the ocean breeze and sounds of the waves fill the high ceiling of the room, walking out on the balcony at dawn to see the sun climb out of the ocean a hundred feet away. Doves cooed by the infinity-edge pool, which appeared to spill over into white coral-sand beach considered the prettiest beach on mainland Belize.

Paradise, concentrated.

“Placencia is the hottest real estate market on the mainland,” says Bill Shea, with Three Palms/Coldwell Banker in Placencia. “Although the market here cooled along with everything else in the Caribbean, in the past three months we are getting traction again. The new airport coming in is one key, the charm and the best beach in Belize doesn’t hurt either.” Click to View Related Video

Now Bulman is taking her vision across the street to her new project “The Peninsula Club,” a 60-acre marina development surrounding an new 88-slip inland marina across the street from Chabil Mar and a hundred yards from the world famous Turtle Inn, Frances Ford Coppola’s Bali-inspired resort. With only 50 marina homesites (four sold in three months) and a marina-side 16 unit villa project appropriately called The Riviera, this development has a nice mix of residential options for a vacation or retirement home. And the fishing just off the beach from Peninsula Club is considered some of the best in the world for bonefish and permit. This ambitious vision has been a dream of Dianne’s since she came to Belize for the first time in 2003 from her native British Columbia. “I love the Belize people and the laid back lifestyle it offers but the services side of vacationing or living here was behind most of the Caribbean,” she said. So in this tiny piece of peninsula paradise (now the Peninsula Club), the masterplan offers a full-service marina, marina village with boutique retail shops, restaurants, bank, dive shop and a medical clinic with helipad.

Belize: Adventure OpportunityJust north of the Placencia Airport are other ambitious developments on this tiny strip of land between the Caribbean Sea and the Mayan Mountains. At Coco Plum, developer Stewart Krohn has designed a master-planned development that features both beautiful beachfront lots and lots on the lagoon side of the Peninsula where Stewart has carved out sites surrounded by naturally inspired channels of water. A separate project under the same name at the south end of Coco Plum is the Villas at Coco Plum. These luxury resort style villas are situated on a beautiful beach complete with a small pier perfect for relaxing with a chilled Belikin, Belize’s official beer. Click to View Related Video

Probably the most aggressive and progressive development on the mainland just up the peninsula from town is the Placencia Hotel and the new project Copal Resort. This luxury resort-style development offers villas and penthouses in a beachfront setting complete with a casino. With full resort amenities this is probably the most modern luxury development in the country.

How did it all hide away this long? Belize is less than two-and-a-half hours by air from Houston or Miami to its 200 miles of coral wonderland. Time it right and you can dive with whale sharks, the largest fish on earth. I settled for snorkeling amid waving purple sea fans and blue-green parrot fish, which nibbled at the coral with a loud chunk-chunk-chunk. Jumping in the water is obligatory after a morning of hunting bonefish around Ragged, Douglas and Saltwater Keys, in the Water Key Range.

So is reconsidering your departure. The service was superb at Chabil Mar, where the concierge bumped back my small plane charter to allow another day of adventuring amid hundreds of palm-covered islands.

Back on the plane home, the soon-to-be ex-pat broker told me Belize is still a secret, unknown. In fact, the whole country was outraged, he said, when sportscaster Bob Costas, in an Olympic broadcast, introduced athletes from “the island nation of Belize.” Oh, well, might as well be an island nation.

It’s not an isle, of course, except in the unknown, escapist sense. But it won’t be so for long.

“Roads are coming, prices are going up,” Wright said. “But it’s still off the radar of most Americans. You ask and they don’t where it is.”

Source:  Luxury Living International

Spotlight on Belizean Author, James Sullivan Martinez

James Sullivan Martinez (fl. 1914-1926).  A self-educated man who never went to high school, James Sullivan Martinez served in the British Honduras Territorial Force in World War I. Occupying a special place in Belizean poetry, he is best known as an experimenter and innovator deftly using the Creole language as a medium of communication that captured and reflected the local atmosphere. The power of Martinez’ poetry lies in its natural simplicity, and his prolific talent is shown in his collection of poetry “Caribbean Jingles” published in Belize in the 1920’s. This book holds the honor of being recognized as one of the first serious collections of poems published by a national. His expression was also directed into another arena, because as he followed his father to the timber camps he learned how to work the mahogany wood, which he portrayed in the superior quality craftsmanship exemplified by his work in St. John’s Cathedral in Belize City.

Sapadilli Tam – (A Sailor’s Tale)


by: By James S. Martinez, for
Belize Audobon Society Newsletter Vol. 32 No. 4 – (January 2001)

PREFACE- Recently, tourists to Belize have been flocking to a southern caye for a unique ocean event. The unforgettable, mind blowing experience of swarming with the whale shark (Rhiniodon typus), largest of the shark family and largest fish in the world at over 40 ft in length, has stirred a lot of excitement in Belize. The magnificent fish, characterized by its huge size, wide mouth and distinctive pattern of spots, can be seen feeding amidst spawning snappers during certain months of the year.

But nearly eighty years ago, the legendary size and very existence of this monstrous fish was immortalized in a humorous poem by James S. Martinez entitled “Sapadilli Tam”. The poem forms a part of a 1920 collection of his works entitled, Caribbean Jingles – Dialect and Other poems of British Handuras. James, the humble and self-educated son of a mahogany woodcutter, was a prolific poet whose simplistic style often captured and reflected the local atmosphere of that period of our Belizean History. Early British Honduran fishermen nicknamed the Whale Shark “Sapadilli Tam” because the huge fish was frequently sighted around Sapodilla Cayes off the Southern Coast of Belize.

Sapadilli Tam

You want to hear of of w’at I know,
About de fish day tark of so,
De one dat people use to see,
Outside o’ Sapadilli Caye?

Now list’n don’t y’u be supprise;-
I seen dat shark wid my own eyes;
Not only once but time a score,
W’en I was tradin’ to Omoa.

De fust time dat I seen dat shark,
De evenin jus was getting dark;
De sea was smude, de win’ was low:
De schooner “Jane” was driftin’ slow.

Jus’ den dere came in sight a sail,
(we t’ought t’was one) an’ so we hail;
but it was goin’ fas’, it seem
as if it was p’opell wid steam.

But w’en it get to us quite near.
We all was full wid awful fear,
For now we could plainly see,
It was a monster of de sea.

He check his speed den round us swim;
But we did not quite care fo’ him.
We t’ink how we could mek him go,
So overboa’d some pork we t’row.

He start at once de food to eat,
An’ den we try to mek retreat.
For now de win’ commence to blow,
We put de boat to’ near de sho’.

An’ so it was we get away,
As bes’ respec’ to him we pay;
An’ pray ne’ermo’ to have a calm,
W’en nearin’ Sapadilli Tam.

Dere’s some strange story dat I hear,
De trut’ of dem I cannot swear.
But I am stric’ly now compel,
To give to you as how dey tell-

A dorey once was coming o’er,
Wid Waika from Masquiter Shore-.
Dey saw a caye (Dey t’ought ’twas one)
An’ so dey went to it to lan’.

So we’n dey went asho’ an’ look,
Dey mek a fire an’ start to cook;
But w’en de pot was bubblin’ free,
De shark sink undeneat’ de sea.

‘Tis also tol’ dat coc’nut tree,
upon his back some people see,
but dere is some mistake I fear,
for I had never seen it dere.

But many a time about dat sea,
W’en nearin’ Sapadilli Caye,
De sailor heart would beat fo’ fear,
Dat Sapadilli Tam is near.

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