If Spanish cocido is structured and traditional, Dominican-Style Cocido is relaxed, abundant, and meant to be eaten in one big comforting plate. Deep broth, tender meats, chickpeas, and that unmistakable Caribbean serving style.

???? Protein Score
- Estimated protein per serving: 25-35g
- ???? Powerhouse: 25g+ protein per serving (meal-in-one)
- Chickpeas + pork + beef + chicken make this a true protein-dense comfort meal.
Protein Boost
Already strong, but if you want it even more balanced:
- Add extra chickpeas
- Include lean chicken breast in addition to pork
- Serve with cabbage salad instead of extra rice
- Finish with fresh cilantro + squeeze of lime for brightness
Why you will love this
- Dominican-style cocido keeps the Spanish base but adapts it to Caribbean habits:
- Everything is served together, not separated into courses
- Rice is almost always on the plate
- Avocado is common
- Broth is slightly lighter and less structured
- Seasoning may include oregano and more garlic
- It’s a cultural evolution of the same comforting idea.
What’s the Difference: Spanish vs Dominican Cocido?
???????? Cocido Madrileño (Spain)
- Served in 2–3 courses
- Broth with noodles
- Chickpeas + vegetables
- Meats separately
- Often heavier on cured meats
- Broth is rich, sometimes fattier
- Strong focus on tradition and structure
- Eaten especially in colder months
???????? Dominican-Style Cocido
- Served all together in one bowl or plate
- Almost always paired with white rice
- Avocado is common
- Broth tends to be slightly lighter
- More flexible with meats
- Comfort food, family-style
- Feels closer to a “sancocho cousin” than a formal course meal
Think of it as Spanish roots, Caribbean heart.

Dominican-Style Cocido (Caribbean Chickpea & Meat Stew)
Ingredients
Base
- 2 cups dried chickpeas soaked overnight OR 2 cans drained
- Water to cover + 2 inches
- Olive oil
- Salt
- Paprika
Meats
- 5 oz serrano ham chunk
- 1 ham bone
- 1 marrow bone
- 5 oz bacon chunks
- 1 large fresh chorizo
- 1 chicken thigh optional but common in DR homes
- Morcilla optional
- Vegetables
- 1 onion
- 2 garlic cloves
- 2 carrots
- 2 potatoes
- Optional: cabbage wedge
Instructions
Build the broth
- Add bones, ham, bacon, chorizo, and chicken to large pot. Cover with water. Bring to boil, skim foam, reduce to gentle simmer.
- Add chickpeas + aromatics
- Add soaked chickpeas, onion, garlic, carrots. Simmer 60–75 minutes.
- Add potatoes
- Add during last 20 minutes.
Taste + adjust
Season carefully. Ham + chorizo bring salt already.
Nutrition
How We Serve It (Dominican Style)
- One generous plate
- Scoop of white rice
- Avocado slices
- Optional drizzle of olive oil
- Everything together
No formal courses. Just comfort.
Storage + Meal Prep
Fridge: 4 days
Freezer: 3 months
Remove excess fat after chilling overnight for lighter reheating.
FAQ
Is Dominican cocido the same as Spanish cocido?
They share roots, but Dominican cocido is served in one plate and often includes rice and avocado.
What makes it Dominican?
Serving style, flexibility in meats, and Caribbean eating habits.
Is it similar to sancocho?
Yes, but cocido focuses more on chickpeas and cured meats.
Can I use canned chickpeas?
Yes, add them after meats simmer for flavor.
Why serve with rice?
In Dominican cuisine, rice balances and stretches stews.
Is this high protein?
Yes. Chickpeas + mixed meats make it protein-dense.
Try These Next
- Tomato and Basil Keto Quiche Crust (your low-carb crust reference)
- Bacon Spinach Quiche (with low-carb crust option)
- Chimichurri Turkey Burgers (for a high-protein dinner)
- Garlicky Shrimp Mofongo (no fry method)
If you are cooking protein-forward after 45, check out my other high-protein recipes and meal ideas on the blog.
Cook With Love, Eat With Joy!
Share Your Experience
Did you make this recipe? I’d love to see it.
Tag @petitgourmetsd and use #petitgourmetsd so I can share your plate.
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This looks perfect for the rainy day we are having today - warm and wonderful!
I was also raining here! just perfect
Wow!! such a lovely dish. It looks yum 🙂
Thank you! it was ???
This sounds amazing, Gaila! I've never heard of cocido, but it looks like the ultimate cold-weather comfort food. I can just imagine curling up on the couch with a good bowl of this one. 🙂 Thanks so much for sharing. It looks delicious!!
Me salió casi tan bueno como los que come uno en Madrid ....un platillo perfecto para el clima de Escocía !!
Hola Leila!!!
Cuánto me alegra saber que te quedó tan bueno como los de Madrid!! Un abrazo (virtual)