Being born in Brazil I have this dish running through the blood in my veins. It is one of the most satisfying dishes to your belly and soul. Even though I was born in the Amazon, not in the Angola region, where it has its origins, It was one of the first things I ever ate. The "National Dish" extends to every region of Brazil, and to Brazilians all over the globe. The most commonly widespread story of the origins on the dish was that it is slave food, made from discarded pieces of meat from wealthy land owners to the slaves, the smoked tails, snouts, hocks and feet of a pig bobbling around in a cauldron of black beans. These days to get a Feijuada Completa it still has these components but people tend to use more accepted meats and tend to go with the less grotty bits or omit them completely. It is an incredibly heavy meal that takes a long time to make so it is traditionally eaten on Saturdays and Wednesdays. The meal is served with white rice(Arroz Blanco), toasted powdered yucca (farofa), garlicky collard greens( covie) and orange slices. I always make a heart of palm and avocado salad, yucca fries, tomato vinaigrette and of course tons of Guarana, a Brazilian soda that has more caffeine than coffee. If there is room for desert, coconut flan and /or Acai compote over tapioca ice cream. This dish is great for a late Saturday lunch party, there are many versions of it but for simplification reasons I will give you the standard version, for the vegetarian, version simply omit the meat, it still tastes great.
Feijuada
1 lb black turtle beans soaked overnight, water discarded
2 large onions chopped
4 cloves garlic
salt
black pepper
2 bay leaves
1 bunch cilantro
1 lb Linguica
1/2 lb salt pork cut into cubes
1 lb beef chuck cut into cubes
Add all ingredients into a large pot and slowly simmer over low heat 6 hours constantly adding water to maintain as a stew, stir but make sure beans don't turn to mush
Sides
Steamed white rice
Covie
Thinly sliced collard greens flash fried with garlic oil and salt
Farofa
Pan toasted yucca flour with scallions
Salsa
Tomatoes, red onions , green peepers and cilantro in light garlic vinegrette
Sliced oranges
Fried yucca
Hearts of palm
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