>> "Cooking is now one of the most popular professions, it must be as popular as surfing," said Fernando Pacheco, chef and owner of Caplina restaurant.
Located in Lima's affluent Miraflores neighborhood not far from the stony beaches where surfers ride some of Peru's finest waves, Caplina competes with two other famous restaurants nearby and is a stop on the city's new Culinary Tour.
The full-day excursion starts at a market for some of the hundreds of varieties of potatoes and corn used in Peruvian cooking, as well as table-sized flatfish.
Tourists savor fresh shellfish sprinkled with lime at the market and then move on to eateries and bars, where they learn to make Peru's famous cebiche -- fish marinated in lime juice and hot peppers -- and pisco sour cocktails.
Other classic Peruvian dishes such as carapulcra pork and dry potato stew, choncholi tripe, or skewer-grilled anticuchos made of fish, chicken or beef heart are also thrown in.
Cebiche used to be marinated for hours but is now "cooked" in freshly squeezed lime juice for 5-10 minutes, a style change adopted with the arrival of Japanese immigrants, one of dozens of foreign influences in Peruvian culture.
The "aji" chili, or hot pepper, gives cebiche a kick. Local legend has it that one foreigner who tasted it gasped "son-of-a-bitch," which Peruvians then adopted as "cebiche".
Patricia la Rosa, who heads Culinary Tour Peru, says the more believable version is that it comes from "cebo" -- pieces of fish used as bait that fishermen also marinated and ate.
Her tours are proving to be a hit and she says she has over 300 bookings made through to October, including one group of as many as 100 tourists. Over 200 visitors have already taken the tour since it opened last August.
"That tour is genius. It's a whole-day thing, so tourists spend more time in Lima. All things culinary are really popular," said Jose Pacora, a manager with Coltur -- a big local tour operator, which works with 8,000 mainly U.S. and British tourists a year and now plans to offer the Culinary Tour to its clients.
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