by jenny_haddow » Thu May 04, 2006 8:55 am
Good recipes BBQer, bean dishes are great with BBQ. Here's a recipe for Feijoada, I used to eat this most weekends when I live in Rio de J. and I've cooked it for the multitudes, you cant cook a Feijoada for less than 10 people. It's indisputably the national dish of Brazil, traditionally served on Saturday for lunch, and eaten with an accompanying tall glass of caipirinha (cant find cachaca in the UK though so white rum has to do). For all you who buy in whole pigs this is a great dish for using the ears and tails and the tongue(smoked), the authentic Feijoada always has a pigs tails and ears floating around. Most of us don't have those available so I've substituted with pork ribs.
2 and a quarter lbs small black beans
1 smoked pigs tongue, could be ox, in one piece
1lb beef jerky, in one piece
2lb pork ribs, in one piece
12oz fatty smoked streaky bacon in one piece
12oz sausages, I used Toulouse as Brazilian sausages have bacon in them
12 oz smoked chorizo
2-3 fresh bay leaves
5-6 cloves garlic, crushed
4 tbsp olive oil
Hang fire on the salt until you see what effect the bacon has.
If you buy the beans from a supplier of Brazilian black beans check them carefully for stones or you could be paying for your dentists next holiday in the Caribbean.
Wash the beans, put in a bowl and cover with water, leave to soak overnight. Rinse the jerky and the tongue, put in a separate bowl cover with water and leave to soak over night, change the water 3-4 times with the meat.
Drain the beans, put in a LARGE heavy pan, cover with water, bring to the boil, skim the surface scum, lower the heat, cover and simmer for an hour.
Meanwhile, drain the soaked meats, rinse again, and put in to a second large heavy pan. Add the streaky bacon and the pork ribs and cover with water. Bring to the boil, skim the surface, lower the heat and simmer for an hour.
Don't drain the beans, you want that black cooking liquid. Transfer the meat, with their cooking liquid to pan with the beans. Add the sausages, chorizo and bay leaves and more water to cover if needed, cover and simmer for about 30 minutes. Notice all the meats are left whole.
Heat the oil in a frying pan over a low heat and cook the crushed garlic for a couple of minutes, don't burn it. Ladle some of the beans from the big pot, and put them into the frying pan with the garlic and mash them with a wooden spoon, return this to the meat mixture as a thickener. Mash more beans if you want it thicker. Cook for a further 5 mins or so on a very low heat, and test for salt, now's the time to add it if needed.
Lift the meats from the pan and cut them into even sized pieces. Arrange them on a large platter keeping the types of meat separate. Spoon a ladle full of the beans over the meats, and put the rest of the beans in a large serving bowl.
Serve with white rice, a platter of peeled and sliced oranges, toasted cassava flour (farofa), I sometimes stir raisins and chopped banana in this. Kove, which is stir fried, thinly sliced greens with garlic and chopped smoked bacon, and a small dish of chilli oil, for those who like a kick in their food.
If you can get the Brazilian black beans (there used to be a supplier in Notting Hill) they are better because they produce a dark black liquid that permeates the meats, and the flavour is fabulous.
Muito, muito, bem
Try it, invite a crowd, you'll still be eating at midnight if the cachaca doesn't get you first!
Jen