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Country Guide > Caribbean > Haiti


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Food & Drink
The French cuisine is good and the Creole specialities combine French, tropical and African influences. Dishes include Guinea hen with sour orange sauce, tassot de dinde (dried turkey), grillot (fried island pork), diri et djondjon (rice and black mushrooms), riz et pois (rice and peas), langouste flambé (local lobster), ti malice (sauce of onions and herbs), piment oiseau (hot sauce) and grillot et banane pese (pork chops and island bananas). Sweets include sweet potato pudding, mango pie, fresh coconut ice cream, cashew nuts and island fruits. French wine is available in the better restaurants. The island drink is rum and the best is probably ‘Barbancourt’, made by a branch of Haiti’s oldest family of rum and brandy distillers.

Nightlife
There is plenty of choice ranging from casinos to African drum music and modern Western music and dance. There is something happening in at least one major hotel every evening with the main attraction being folkloric groups and voodoo performances. On Saturday nights bamboche, a peasant-style dance, can be seen in one of the open-air dance halls. Hotels often have the most up-to-date information on local nightlife.

Shopping
Bargaining is recommended at the Iron Market, where both good- and bad-quality local items can be bought, including carvings, printed fabrics, leatherwork, paintings (particularly in the naïf style, for which Haiti is famous), straw hats, seed necklaces and jewellery, cigars and foodstuffs. Port-au-Prince has a good selection of shops and boutiques selling a wide range of local and imported items. Bargaining is an accepted practice. Shopping hours: Mon-Fri 0800-1200 and 1300-1600, Sat 0800-1200.

Special Events
For a complete list of carnivals and festivals, contact the Ministère du Tourisme (see Contact Addresses). The following is a selection of special events occurring in Haiti in 2005:
Mar 21 Carnival, throughout Haiti. Feb-Mar Rara, Leogane. Apr Pan-American Day. Jul/Aug Local traditional and religious festivals, many towns including Limonade, Petit Goaves, Plaine du Nord and Ouanaminthe. Jul Saut d’Eau, Ville-Bonheur; Feast of St. Anne, Limonade. Nov Gede (or Fétdemó). Dec Discovery Day (celebrations to commemorate Columbus’ landing on the north coast in 1492).


Social Conventions
Informal wear is acceptable, although scanty beachwear should be confined to the beach or poolside. Only the most elegant dining-rooms encourage guests to dress for dinner. Tipping: 10 per cent service charge is added to hotel and restaurant bills. Taxi drivers do not expect tips.


   
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