Is Portuguese food common/easy to find where you live?
Chicago area here, not at all since we never had any PT diaspora move here which is a shame because it's my favorite cuisine. I have to cook my own bitoque, caldo verde, and bifanas.
Pic very related.
Dominic Gray
proper cheeky
John Sanchez
We have that in Chicago. The only thing that seems Portuguese about it is that they have Sagres and Super Bock. Haven't tried their pasteis yet.
Landon Russell
>pasteis that doesn't sound like nando's
i dunno what is portugese about nando's either desu, it's just chicken
Justin Allen
They were on the desert menu, they called them "naughty natas" and were based on pasteis de nata. Not sure if you were getting them mixed up with pasties (which are also GOAT but I usually have to drive to Michigan to get them).
Matthew Taylor
>Norway >Bacalhau yes
Nicholas Carter
That's a sad bitoque, desu.
Elijah Richardson
We have Frango de Churrasco here, which is grilled chicken with a special rub.
Nando's uses one of our colonies' version's recipe and isn't authentic Portuguese food. Never had it myself, so it may still be good.
Isaac Fisher
Caldo Verde is pretty good. Do you add chouriço slices?
Joshua Jenkins
i cook all my chicken in the rub they sell in supermarkets it is pretty good desu
Liam Roberts
There are some immigrant Portuguese restaurants
Robert Wood
Is it a standard BBQ sauce?
Since this is a Portuguese-specific thread, ours uses: green peppers garlic piri-piri sauce (those small chilli peppers) salt vinagre olive oil rosemary parsley
John Foster
nah, they have a bbq one but there are lots with varying degrees of spiciness
Adrian Perry
And white wine too, I think.
Yeah, it's meant to be spicy, but it's not just heat. It has a flavour to it, too, which is kind of the point of the dish, since otherwise it's just chicken.
Cooper Butler
>Rice >Meat >Eggs >Potatoes WTF I love Portugal now.
Alexander Garcia
>Jersey
Plenty seeing as they're one of 2 minorities we have and they run a fair few cafes
Portuguese rolls are pretty decent
James Richardson
>Portuguese rolls Huh, weird name for Papo Secos. Yeah, they are the basic bread here. It's one of the things I miss the most abroad, along with proper coffee. It's always the little things.
Yeah, we like using 2 starches, often.
Adam Mitchell
In Bergen city they sell small portions of Bacalhau as snack or a small lunch.
Julian Davis
We have them a lot. My usually lunch is some havarti cheese and a few slices of chourição on one of those.
Yep but we can only get spanish and mexican chorizo here. I usually use the spanish since it's pretty close to what I had in Portugal, while mexican isn't even the same sausage.
I need to find a Portuguese girlfriend or something, I just cook my own stuff and I'm paranoid about it being too inauthentic sometimes.
I've also made bacalhau à braz, and I'm going to try pasteis de nata some time and leave them in the brake room at work if they're any good.
Wyatt Wood
It's just very similar to our baked "rolls" so the simplest name is that + Portuguese. I don't like coffee so I wouldn't know how good it is, but I'm sure you could find a place that feels like home in St Helier.
Jose Turner
It's the basis of brazilian food, so yes.
Kayden Torres
It's fuckin stake with egg and double portion of carbohydrates. It's the most retarded dish ever and there is absolutely nothing original about it. Also, any other retarded nation serves rice and potatoes together?
Jeremiah Nelson
The sauce/marinade is pretty unique.
Nathaniel Bailey
Yeah, I've seen this posted a couple times. You guys up there really like your tomatoes. I've always wondered if it's a cultural thing because it's a sweet fruit/vegetables that grows fast enough for your climate.
It's odd because we have a million recipes for bacalhau, but none of them have tomato.
Pão com chourição is 100% legit lusitanian afternoon snack.
Bacalhau à Braz is probably my favourite bacalhau dish, outside pasteis de bacalhau.
>Spanish chorizo yeah, that's a shame, but it's probably as close as you're gonna get. I don't even know the difference, honestly, I think ours are meatier and theirs have more fat? but I'm not sure.
You don't need a Portuguese girlfriend, you need a Portuguese grandma. Getting together in a cold-ish (for us at least) windy rainy day with your family and enjoying a cozido is pretty great.
The coffee is a bit harder to get there, probably, since we use Brazilian beans and Italian espresso machines, which might be a hard combination to find. It's usually less watery than the rest of Europe, and much less watery than american coffee. The bread is easy to replicate, just some flour and milk, I think.
Yeah, Brazilian food is pretty much the tropical version of Portuguese food.
You have to let the steak marinate in wine for a while. It doesn't have to be complex to be good, mate, especially for a foreigner to be able to reliably replicate off of a text recipe.
Landon Davis
marinading in wine is really nothing really special
doesn't need to be complex or fancy, but if you wanna talk about Portuguese food, it's kinda retarded to start with streak, egg and french fries
Evan Rivera
Like I said, the cafe owners are usually Portuguese immigrants so if you ask for your coffee done however, I'm sure they'd make it right.
Elijah Wilson
I like Portugal.
Strong naval tradition, pioneers in navigation and discovery, tasty looking food
Y'all need a new flag though that red and green is killing me
Landon Clark
I see where you're coming from, but it's a good stepping stone for people not used to the heavier uglier foods of the north/interior, even though they are tastier.
I was just doubting they had access to the ingredients there, but I suppose they can always import it. It really shouldn't be that hard, no.
Fucking tell me about it.
Owen Stewart
I forwarded your post to our parliament and hopefully they will do everything in their power to change it so you won't suffer anymore
Andrew James
I mean, imagine them starting with Cabidela.
Brody Kelly
>pão com chouriço My forum buddy and I got this at a place near Santos after we went to Bairro Alto one night, I really need to learn that. My typical lunch isn't quite the same, it's just a sandwich with chourição slices.
I think I remember PT chouriço being smokier. If I lived in Massachusetts it would be easier to find.
>You don't need a Portuguese girlfriend, you need a Portuguese grandma
Kek, too bad my dad's family is 100% German (only 2 or 3 generations removed from Hesse), while my mom's family is German/Alsatian and Irish. The only good food in my ancestry is bratwurst and schnitzel.
>tfw I could have been a tuga-American from Rhode Island or Massachusetts and have delicious cod at family gatherings
Christian Hall
Caldo verde is really nice start. It's simple, unique and tasty. Caldo for president!
Cooper Baker
Thanks, if things don't work out let me know, I can contact my government to bring you guys some democracy
Always liked that flag though, the dark blue and white look very regal and symbolize the sailing tradition
Adam Gomez
It was the first PT dish I ever cooked. My first caldo verde was pretty shitty because I got the wrong type of cale, used mexican chorizo, and water instead of chicken broth. Ever since then I've had it down, especially with fresh kale from my garden.
Asher Russell
Nice. Of course everybody here claims that their grandma makes the best and most unique one but I'm pretty sure everybody can make at least a decent one in few tries.
Liam Gray
>I can contact my government to bring you guys some democracy Considering the tradition of both our countries, you'd probably end up nuking our neighbours and with us loving you for it. We'd call the new sea "Bacalhau Bay"
The flag really is great. We're saving it for a revolution. Can't put it up now and in 40 years bring it down.
>kale Huh, I've always heard that word and assumed it was some sort of Spinach or Leek. We just call it cabbage here. Never realised it was the same. The first try sounds very disheartening, but glad you pulled through.
My grandma's Caldo Verde can beat your grandma's Caldo Verde. fite me irl
Henry Turner
I was racist to a Portuguese girl once
I apologise
David Stewart
I don't know how easy it would be for you to get the ingredients, particularly the salted cod, but if you manage, try making Pasteis de Bacalhau (aka bolinhos de bacalhau or bolos de bacalhau). They are fried and should be ever so slightly crunchy on the outside, and creamy and slightly spicy on the inside. They are pretty delicious and most people love them.
Kek, what did you say/do?
Isaac Wilson
There's actually an Italian grocery store in my town which sells bacalhau. It's not as much as I saw at Pingo Doce in Porutgal, but it's available nonetheless.
Wyatt Peterson
I was doing a professional qualification and we had to assign people to a hypothetical job in our business model. For the bants I gave the Portuguese girl the role of cleaner.
She didn't take it well and I got a light telling off from staff
Caleb Murphy
If it looks like 's background, then it's probably as good as you're gonna get. You just opened a whole new world of Bacalhau. Try not to make it too popular, otherwise we're gonna end up poorer.
We really thrive on being the only fanatics of bacalhau, and get it reasonably cheap because not a lot of people want it.
That's cold. Portuguese women DO NOT take bantz very well, and do not enjoy losing control of a situation via humiliation. Just like all women, I guess.
Jackson Wood
>french fries >steak >eggs >rice
What makes this Portuguese? I come from a very German region and we eat like that all the time.
Charles Carter
bolinhos are great, I just hate when I occasionally bite into one with that sharp bacalhau bone
Blake Lewis
>Portuguese women DO NOT take bantz very well kek, this happened to me once. She's that girl from culturepals who turned me down recently while I was in Caldas, we're still pretty close friends though.
It was more or less like that, it's hard to screw up salting cod, though. I usually only use a half kilo of it for dinner for my whole family (4 people) so it's more than enough.
I wish I could get Sagres around here, it's not the best beer ever but it's pretty refreshing and just feels right with PT food. We can get Vidigal though.
Christopher Brooks
>The flag really is great. We're saving it for a revolution. Can't put it up now and in 40 years bring it down
Yeah true
Good things come to those who wait eh
Landon Brown
The steak preparation, mostly. It's not a very old recipe, just an easy thing for restaurant to serve with local ingredients that we made our own. It's supposed to be filling and accessible to everyone. For more hardcore Portuguese cuisine, you have less generic-looking things.
Yeah. Motherfuckers sometimes bite back.
>it's hard to screw up salting cod It has to be dried in the sun first. When Norway took back control over their waters, there was a period when bacalhau sucked because they skipped this. It has since gotten better, I think we sent some fishermen to join their fleets and handle it.
Angel Fisher
I don't know but I've been to Portugal and liked the food I tried, like caldo verde, arroz com pato, bacalhau com natas and some other things I don't remember Top good
Daniel Foster
in my rural shithole they only sell sausages and beer/vodka
how much portuguese is in these?
Chase Young
All good choices. Neat seeing Caldo Verde getting so much love. It's very banal here, and I often forget about it.
Hmm. Not a lot to work with. No fish?
Daniel Roberts
Also, beer/vodka pretty much tells Poland's tragic history.
Matthew Harris
there's occasionally Gadus chalcogrammus
Liam Edwards
It is good, because the ingredients are so fresh and such good quality, but the bacalhau dish mixed with rice isn't very enjoyable at all.
>Nandos >Portuguese >not just an overpriced low class fried chicken joint
British education
Zachary White
Mate, that's bacalhau. Dry it, salt it, and then re-hydrate it and you can make:
Bacalhau com Todos Bacalhau com Natas Bacalhau à Brás Bacalhau à Zé do Pipo Bacalhau à Gomes de Sá Bacalhau à Lagareiro Bolos de Bacalhau
And like, 100 other recipes. You're bound to find one you like.
>bacalhau dish mixed with rice We have that? That sounds shitty.
Elijah Wright
Also vinho verde is very very nice.
Aaron Ross
>bacalhau and rice the fuck? ugh
Julian Barnes
That's considered ""unique"" national food? It's the kind of dish you could find in a $5 menu restaurant for construction workers here.
Daniel Phillips
The preparation is unique, and that's kind of the point.
>a $5 menu restaurant for construction workers here. Yeah, same here. That's sort of the point.
Josiah Nguyen
I've attepted to make bacalhau com natas once but it didn't taste as good as at the restaurant where I tried it
Adrian Gonzalez
just a clever way to sell what was once considered spoiled wine
Noah Wright
>bad wine I'll never understand why Brits slurp this up like it's good
Oliver Evans
This even more so.
Lincoln Foster
it's refreshing
Juan Scott
I'm trying to remember what it was called, but it's served everywhere in Lisbo, maybe arroz de bacalhau ? Or perhaps I confused and it was bacalhau a bras, either way it wasn't enjoyable to eat.
The thing I don't like about Portuguese, Spanish and Italian food is that they can be so simple but taste good simply because the ingredients are so much better than whatever """""vegetables""""" and """"fish"""" etc you can get here. However, Turkish food also highlights the base ingredients like other western med countries while being more refined and interesting.
Logan Cooper
Stupid americans on Sup Forums probably
Joseph Sanchez
This isn't true and you know it.
Bentley Martinez
What are you talking about?
Rice and chips in the same plate? i had never seen than in chile outside cuban/colombian restaurans.
Also congratulations you absolute dumbass, you just discovered your diet is Mediterranean.
Parker Bennett
just don't tell us you liked casal garcia
Isaac Ortiz
Yeah, there's surprisingly not many photos of it. I just wanted one that had a whiter steak for the difference. Most of them have the egg on top of it.
The simpler stuff, yeah. We have the good ingredient and climate advantage. Olive Oil outside the Mediterranean fucking sucks and is bitter as fuck.
It's meant to be filling and simple. We don't much see it as quintessential Portuguese food, but it's unique and sold everywhere and most foreigners seem to enjoy it. It has a peculiar preparation method, but it wasn't even originally served with the potatoes and rice and egg, I think. It was just a way of cooking a steak and put on a bread.
Gavin Cook
nah pham, google that shit up
Connor Perez
This one and whatever one your mum served me
Luis Phillips
And now to eat a sad cheese and ham omelette for dinner.
John Sullivan
>Olive Oil outside the Mediterranean fucking sucks and is bitter as fuck.
but bitterness is not necessary bad irmão, it can just be the sign of fresh oil
Ayden Evans
So why would a Portuguese guy who showed us around for the day and who had nothing to gain except the opportunity to share it with us) recommed it ?
Also I saw locals drinking this wine so stop being a knob
Henry Nelson
Heh, it was the whole thing. Olive oil is usually one of the most scammy things you can buy, in non med-countries at least.
When I was in America I bought Gallo and it tasted nothing like ours. Very disheartening.
Cameron Morgan
No need to get nasty. Also, mum hates vinho verde so I know you are lying.
Julian Nguyen
He probs reccommended it becuz ur a brit sucker who slurps that shit up like it's ambrosia d:^)
Alexander Baker
I think he means that Vinho Verde was an accident we tried and managed to sell.
We invented it and it's made and sold here, but not many people drink it. Same with Rosé.
Matthew Butler
No he took us to a restaurant outside the tourist strip in cascais that he really likes (and it was absolutely brilliant), where he recommended vinho verde with the sea bass knowing that he'd be drinking it too.
Jayden Perez
>Olive oil is usually one of the most scammy things you can buy Agreed.
in non med-countries at least Med and non-med alike. I have seen plenty of time people selling some 2€/liter crap from Pingu as homemade extra virgin eco superduper oil.
Matthew Powell
shut the fuck up and keep biting the bait
Ryan Adams
Whatever man. Also because you made me salty I just want to say that Portuguese beer is an abomination.
Adam Thomas
>being salty ate too much cod? haha fgt
Kevin Wright
I only made that one comment, mate. I don't drink alcohol at all, I was just reporting.
Jason Bailey
Calm down John, it's just a banter. Glad you liked it and please come back.
Kevin Smith
Here's one for the nontuguese.
How often do you guys eat soup? I'm talking about when you're not lazily cooking for yourselves with whatever you have available, like in a canteen or something.
Here we don't much do the "eat your vegetables" thing for the kids, it's usually the soup that has all the vegetables, for the most part. I'd say we eat soup at least once a day.
Jordan Sanders
fpbp
Samuel Watson
There's a lot of portuguese in my city but I don't remember seing any portuguese restaurants tb.h Portuguese in my city are very discreet, sometime in even forget that they exists. If only arabs could do the same...
Nathaniel Campbell
First time I've heard something not terrible from the Portuguese diaspora in France.
Everywhere else nobody complains, but Portuguese people in France are cunts.
Hudson Long
Well they are discreet cunts I guess
Camden Cooper
When they come back here they all rent the more expensive cars pretending that they are theirs and pretend that they forgot how to speak Portuguese.
Despite everyone knowing that they are just working construction and living in a shittier apartment just so they can not look like losers when they come back. Apparently the second generation is a lot worse, even, but those don't come back.
Glad to hear that some of them are keeping to the national tradition of shutting up and mind their own business.
Elijah Gray
Not in here they aren't fuking mongs
Michael Reyes
t. João Emigrantoção
Mason Allen
Another Chicagoan here. Same, Brazilian Steakhouses are more common in this area, and there's even one in NW Indiana, but I doubt it's really that authentic.
Christian Butler
this shit in your picture is not food
Gabriel Edwards
Have you had Picanha?
Shit's GOAT. The beef cuts vary from country to country, so maybe it's not as authentic as you'd hope, but the recipes should still be pretty good.
Farofa's great too.
Jack Foster
Where you at? West suburbs here. Did I find the other Chicago Portuboo?
If I had the money and culinary know how I'd considering opening up a Portuguese restaurant in the area. I've never beent o a Brazilian Steakhouse but it just looks overpriced.
Jack Ortiz
what, because it's not halal?
Aiden Butler
They're usually hiding in the Italian neighborhoods on the east coast
Jonathan Ross
The rice does look pretty weird. It should be white.
Jeremiah Long
At Restaurante Super Mário near Largo de Carmo the bitoque had arroz de tomate. Not technically standard but still good.