Showing posts with label planning a trip to brazil. Show all posts
Showing posts with label planning a trip to brazil. Show all posts

Sunday, 1 March 2020

How to plan a vacation in Brazil to fully explore the food and culture



If you want to explore Brazilian cuisine, you must travel across the country as each region has its favorite cuisine. 

Southern Brazil 

Southern Brazil’s cuisine usually revolves around a barbecue, called churrasco in the country. This is often beef seasoned with rock salt and cooked over an open fire. When you travel to Brazil, consider trying the three types of ribs found at smokehouses in Porto Alegre. 

Rio Grande do Sul
If you find yourself traveling to Rio Grande do Sul, then you will want to try the arroz de carreteiro. This favorite dish is usually made with charque, dried beef, and rice. Then, the chef seasons it with onion, garlic, and parsley. There is no way to rush good arroz de carreteriro as the charque needs to soak overnight. You may want to go to Porto Alegre, Brazil, where the arroz de carreteiro, music and dancing are superb. This is not the cheapest city to dine in, however, so you may need to easily transfer money to Brazil before continuing your travel. 

Parana 

As you continue your travels through Southern Brazil, you will enter the state of Parana, where residents have a love for barreado. An exceptional 300-year-old ritual is carried out to prepare this dish that has beef, duck, and a special sauce. The mixture is then slow-cooked in a unique clay pot that is sealed with flour. It is usually served with rice and plantain leaves. In order to try barreado, head to Antonina, Brazil. When heading here, try for an early lunch as the restaurant can get very crowded later in the day. 

Santa Catarina

Once you reach Santa Catarina, you will want to eat the delicious seafood, including scrumptious oysters. Make your way to Florianópolis and dine at one of the restaurants located along the pier. After enjoying your meal, stroll along the glass-covered pier. Since many Germans settled here in the 18th and 19th centuries, you may want to consider getting a piece of their iconic apple pie. 

Midwest Brazil

As you move towards the middle of Brazil, you will find more African and European influences in the cuisine. There is also a heavy Indian influence. Bakeries are a popular dining option in the middle of Brazil. Since this region is near the center of the country, it is also a great place to try a variety of fruit grown in Brazil, including jabuticaba that resembles a grape, atemoia which has a sweet and sour natural taste, açaí which tastes great in a bowl of cereal, and bananas.



MatoGrosso


You will feel the influence of people who have moved from Paraguay and Bolivia or who have ancestors that did when you taste the food of this region where chicken is a very popular dish. Frango com gabiroba is found on many dinner tables. Similar to grilled chicken, its secret lies in the sauce made with peri-peri and paprika. You can find it served at many different restaurants, which are often called chicken joints. 

São Paulo

Many Japanese people settled in the southeastern Brazilian state of Sao Paulo, and you can find their influences in many dishes served there. You can also find Italian influences and African influences. If you are running short on money and you have no one to wire more to Brazil, then heading to this region is an excellent choice because of its vast diversity. If you want to see a great show head to Olympia, Palace, or Tom Brasil and order the traditional tutu a mineira, which is mashed beans served with roasted pork loin, cabbage, and rice. You may also want to consider ordering the fried shrimp pie, which is called acaraje. 

Minas Gerais

Many family farms cover Minas Gerais. You will find several traditional cooking methods used in this state. Many call this the food capital of Brazil, and there are several foods that you will want to try. Their soft white cheese called queijo Minas is often consumed as breakfast or an afternoon snack. It is firmer in this state than in other parts of Brazil. Fried cassava flour is usually eaten with beans and rice in this state. Most importantly, however, Minas Gerais is where farofa de andu is served alongside almost every meal.