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What you need to know about Portuguese food

There's more to the country's cuisine than custard tarts.

Grilled sardines

Grilled sardines. Source: Kaily Koutsogiannis

Moorish influence, native peasant cuisine and culinary imports from Portugal's colonial endeavours have shaped the country's cuisine. Expect lots of seafood, beans, rice, chillies, olive oil, cooking over coals and robust, earthy flavours.

1. Salted cod moves in mysterious ways

"Bacalhau" is Portuguese salted cod, and it has dominated the Meditteranean cuisine since the mid-1500s, when it was a means to preserve fish pre-refrigeration. Some say that there's 365 ways to cook bacalhau, "one for every day of the year"; others, more than 1000. Whatever the number, this salt cod, chickpea and egg salad (salad grao de bico) is one of these.
Salt cod, chickpea and egg salad (salad grao de bico)
Salt cod, chickpea and egg salad (salad grao de bico). Source: China Squirrel

2. Portuguese custard tarts aren't just popular outside Portugal

Anyone familiar with the Portuguese custard tart is familiar with the thought, "why do they even bother selling them singly?". One is clearly never enough. It's a curious appeal too—cold custard in a cold pastry case. But somehow it just works... the pasty is crumbly and slightly salty, but with a little chew; the custard is solid but soft; the texture creamy but light (thank you, Portugal). Called locally, "pastel de nata", the tarts can be found at pastelerias throughout Portugal.
Portuguese custard tarts (pastéis de nata)
Portuguese custard tarts (pastéis de nata). Source: Alan Benson

3. Seafood reigns supreme

Portugal is a seafood-loving country, the highest per capita in Europe. These grilled sardines, cooked over charcoal with just a little lemon and salt will show you why—because the freshest seafood needs little intervention.
Grilled sardines
Grilled sardines. Source: Kaily Koutsogiannis

4. You say chorizo, the Portuguese say chouriço

Meaty, fatty and heavily laden with paprika, chorizo is well-known and well-loved. If you can get your hands on the Portuguese version, chouriço, you'll find it just a flavourful but less spicy than it's Spanish relative. Try it straight-up with this plump and crisp grilled chorizo (chourico assado).
chorizo.jpg
Grilled chorizo (chourico assado).

5. Piri-piri happened long before Nando's peri-peri

Both the variety of chilli and the sauce made from the chilli is known as "piri-piri" in Portuguese. The name comes from Swahili, with "piri-piri" meaning "pepper-pepper", and has morphed into several versions, including "pili-pili" and "peri-peri". Try making your own piri-piri chicken, and cook it on a barbecue for the best (and most authentic) results.
Piri-piri chicken
Piri-piri chicken. Source: Kaily Koutsogiannis

6. Rice is big, really big

Portugal is Europe’s largest consumer of rice, at around 17kg per person a year. It’s used in stews and soups, sauteed with seafood, baked with duck, added to blood sausage filling, and even used pastries and desserts.

7. If you're in Portugal at Christmas, you'll eat (Portuguese-style) French toast

Making Portuguese rabanadas, like this recipe for fried bread with cinnamon sugar (rabanadas) is a three-step process: soak thickly sliced bread in milk, dip it in beaten eggs, deep-fry it in olive oil, then dust it liberally in cinnamon sugar. It's most commonly eaten during the Christmas period, washed down with a black coffee or nip of port wine.
Portuguese toast
Fried bread with cinnamon sugar (rabanadas). Source: Katie Kaars

8. Portuguese cornbread may not be what you're expecting, and leftovers are treasured as crumbs

Cornbread usually conjures up images of American cornbread, which is grainy and cake-like, made with polenta and cooked in a cast iron skillet. Portuguese cornbread is more bread-like, using cornmeal mixed with wheat flour, and yeast as a rising agent. It's an absolute staple of local cuisine, and leftovers are turned into crumbs for salads, stews and sauteed dishes, like in this recipe for migas, a stew-like dish of cornbread crumbs, black-eyed peas, carrot, kale, pine nuts and aromatics.
Migas
Migas. Source: Sharyn Cairns

9. Port is Portugal's most famous drink

This seems to be stating the obvious, but the correlation between Port and Portugal slips by many of us. Port is a fortified wine from Douro Valley in Northern Portugal. It had its heyday in 1700s England, and these days, outside Portugal, is just sipped by a few as an after-drink drink—the rest of us are more familiar with it as a cooking wine. It's used to bring sweetness, richness and a touch of acidity to this chicken thighs with pears, chestnuts and port. But, just like sherry, there's different varieties based on the grape varieties and aging process, the main ones being Ruby, Tawny, White and Pink.
Chicken thighs with pears, chestnuts and port
Chicken thighs with pears, chestnuts and port. Source: Mónica Pinto

10. Tripe stew is a symbol of Porto

Porto-style tripe and white bean stew (tripas a moda do porto) is an iconic dish of Porto, and a symbol of the locals' resourcefulness. Legend has it, after donating all the city's produce to Henry the Navigator when he set off for Ceuta in 1415, all that was left was tripe. Locals turned it into this flavourful recipe.
WHITE-BEAN-STEW.jpg
Porto-style tripe and white bean stew (tripas a moda do porto).

11. For breakfast, they eat toasted sandwiches coated in cheese

Traditionally, these doorstops-of-a-toastie contain pork, smoked sausage, bacon and beefsteak, and are topped with a fried egg and cheese. Our tuna francesinha (Portuguese cheese toastie) takes a (slightly) lighter route, using tuna, veal and ham.
Tuna francesinha (Portuguese cheese toastie)
Tuna francesinha (Portuguese cheese toastie). Source: Benito Martin
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What you need to know about Portuguese food | SBS Food