Narrowing down a menu for Brazil was
difficult......simply so many options! In the end, I decided on the national
dish, Feijoada (a black bean & meat stew); and I was not going to
use canned beans, I have not had success in the past with dried beans, but I
was determined to make it work. Which
meant I had to start the night before. And they turned out great!
The menu for our Brazilian dinner:
Drink: Caipirinihas
Main: Feijoada (Brazilian black beans)
Dessert: Quindin
A trip to the LCBO to pick up a bottle of
Cachaca (ka-sha-sa) and then a trip to the grocery store for some limes,
a coconut, black beans & black eyed peas and I was ready to go. Cachaca is a liquor made from sugar cane, we
decided it was something like a cross between rum and tequila.....at any rate
it sure packs a punch!
To make a Caipirinihas wash and cut a lime
into chunks. Put the lime into a glass, sprinkle with sugar and muddle to
release the juice. Add 2 oz of Cachaca, stir, top with ice and
enjoy...carefully. This just might replace my gin & tonics in the
summer....
Our appetizer of black eyed pea fritters
(Acaraje) with shrimp & onion filling did not work out so well, I think
that my batter was too wet perhaps. At any rate, Shawn was able to rescue them,
and they turned out more like a dense cracker (or bread) which we served the
shrimp & onion on top.
Before bed the night before `World
Wednesday` I put the black beans on to soak.
The recipe I was `following` called for 8 cups, but considering I wasn`t
feeding a soccer team, I opted for 4 cups (this still proved to be ALOT!) I had found many recipes for making the
Feijoada, but still had to adapt the recipes to what I had on hand. Finding
Brazilian salted cured beef (carne seca) proved difficult in Kingston. And
although this whole tour is supposed to be about trying new things, I have to
draw a few lines, and pig snouts, ears and tongues is one of those lines! So,
here is my revised Feijoada, for the Canadian kitchen
Feijoada Canadiana
4 cups dried black beans
1 pound venison (to see how we acquired our
venison, check out my other blog http://eatplaylaughdrink.blogspot.ca/!)
1 pound pork ribs
1/2
lb chorizo sausage
1 large onion
2 cloves of garlic
3 tbsp oil
The night before, soak the beans in a large
pot with water to cover at least 3-4 inches. The next day, drain the beans
place in a large pot with enough water to cover 3 inches. Bring the beans to
boil of medium heat.
Meanwhile, cut all the meat into 1” pieces,
and cut the ribs into 1 or 2 rib sections.
Add all the meat and bay leaves to the beans
and simmer for a couple of hours, stirring from time to time, adding water if
necessary, until the beans are tender.
Chop the onion and garlic. Saute them in a
pan with the oil until soft and golden brown. Add 2 ladles of the beans and
mash them. Put this mix back into the pot, and simmer for another hour or so
(until you're ready to eat!) It should have a creamy consistency when done.
Serve over a mound of rice.
For dessert I chose to make Quindin, a
coconut custard like treat. It could be made as one large “cake” but I liked
the idea of the bite sized ones I found, here is the recipe: (it made 36....so
my co-workers got to try some the next day)
8 tbs melted butter, plus more for greasing
the pans
1 1/3 cup sugar, plus more for dusting
14 (!) egg yolks and 1 whole egg (at room
temperature)
1 tsp coconut flavouring (I did not have
any, so omitted this)
½ tsp vanilla (I used a full tsp)
1 2/3 cups fresh or frozen finely grated
coconut, unsweetened (I used a fresh coconut that I cracked and put the meat in
my food processor to grate it....to see my new found method of cracking a
coconut, check out my Jamaica stop)
•
With a pastry brush, paint
inside the molds of 2 mini-muffin pans.
•
Sprinkle sugar over the molds
•
Preheat oven to 350
•
Cream butter and sugar until
creamy
•
Add eggs one at a time,
blending well after each addition, the batter should be smooth
•
add coconut and vanilla
•
fold in fresh coconut
•
put each muffin pan inside a
baking pan, and almost fill each mold with the coconut batter
•
pour hot water into the larger
pans so that the muffin pans are sitting in a water bath, be careful not to
splash water into the batter (I placed the pans in the oven before pouring in
the water)
•
bake for about 15 minutes,
until they are firm to the touch and light golden brown
•
Let cool for 15 minutes (do it
for real....if you pull them out to early, they don't hold their shape and you
get a pool of custard on your plate....trust me) To remove them, run a knife
around the edge to loosen and gently lift them out.
Sounds great! You are getting great at this!
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