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Portuguese Cuisine

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Portuguese cuisine is shaped by centuries of maritime exploration, bringing flavors from Africa, Asia, and Brazil into a robust European kitchen. Bacalhau, pastéis de nata, and piri piri chicken showcase a nation obsessed with bold, honest flavors.

A Culinary Portrait

The heritage, flavors, and traditions of Portuguese cuisine

Portuguese cuisine is the food of a seafaring nation that launched the Age of Exploration and permanently changed the global food landscape. From this small Atlantic nation came the transfer of chilies to Asia and Africa, potatoes and tomatoes to Europe, tempura to Japan, vindaloo to India, and the egg-custard pastry tradition that spread across three continents. Yet Portuguese home cooking remains among Europe's most honest and least pretentious: olive oil, garlic, salt cod, bread, and wine are the pillars of a cuisine that prizes simplicity, quality ingredients, and the slow rhythms of the table.

Roman colonization established olive cultivation, viticulture, and wheat farming. The Moorish period (eighth through thirteenth centuries) introduced almonds, citrus, figs, rice, and the sweet-egg confection tradition that defines Portuguese pastry.

The Age of Exploration (fifteenth through seventeenth centuries) brought spices from Asia, chilies from the Americas, and culinary techniques from Africa, India, and East Asia. Each region maintains fierce culinary pride: the Minho north favors green wine (vinho verde) and hearty soups, the Alentejo south relies on bread-based dishes and olive oil, the Algarve coast celebrates seafood, and the islands of Madeira and the Azores contribute their own distinct traditions. Bacalhau (salt cod, prepared in allegedly 365 ways), olive oil (the cooking fat and finishing oil), garlic (present in virtually every savory dish), piri-piri (hot chili sauce), and egg yolks (the foundation of the vast pastry tradition, historically supplied by convents).

Key Flavors

bread Alentejo

Masters of the Kitchen

The chefs who shaped Portuguese cuisine

Nuno Mendes

One of Portugal's most famous chefs, born in Lisbon, who trained and worked in …

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Nuno Mendes

One of Portugal's most famous chefs, born in Lisbon, who trained and worked in some of the best kitchens worldwide. His cookbook My Lisbon invites readers to experience Lisbon's food scene.

Maria de Lourdes Modesto

Portugal's most celebrated TV chef (1927-2019), known as the 'Diva da Gastronom…

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Maria de Lourdes Modesto

Portugal's most celebrated TV chef (1927-2019), known as the 'Diva da Gastronomia Portuguesa.' The New York Times called her Portugal's Julia Child. Her cookbook Cozinha Tradicional Portuguesa is the country's culinary bible.

Essential Reading

The cookbooks that define Portuguese cuisine

Portugal: The Cookbook Leandro Carreira

Portugal: The Cookbook

Leandro Carreira · 2022

The most comprehensive Portuguese cookbook in English with over 550 traditional recipes celebrating Portuguese gastrono…

The New Portuguese Table David Leite

The New Portuguese Table

David Leite · 2009

130 recipes offering a modern lens on traditional Portuguese cuisine from a Portuguese-American food writer.

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1 authentic recipes from Portuguese cuisine

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