I was checking out the Davis Wiki today to see what new restaurants
had come to town that we had never visited. The Davis Enterprise has a yearly
contest for the bests in Davis, everything from restaurants to veterinarians and just
about every category in between.
The top 3 were listed, one of which was a restaurant I had not heard
of before. It's called Tucos and it is a tiny little place near the railroad
station.
I checked the web site to see what kind of a restaurant it was and it
seemed to be quite versatile. The web site itself
is not much to look at. No attempt at showing quaint seating arrangements or the
small, but rich looking wine shelves. And the list of food (which is quite lengthy
for such a small place) has the usual assortment of starters, salads, burgers and
sandwiches, pastas, entrees and desserts. But sandwiched in there was a special
category.
LATINRight away two items popped out at me. Feijoada and Pao de Queijo. Both are unusual to find in a non-Brasilian restaurant. Back in the 80s, when we had all those Brasilians living here, I learned to make a mean feijoada, a black bean stew that is the national dish of Brasil. At one time I made it so often I didn't need a recipe, though I would need one now.
Brazilian Cheese Bread (Pao de Queijo) plain, bacon, garlic, mushroom, or black truffle $4 (allow 20 min)
Chile Relleno mozzarella-jack cheese, beef, avocado, choice of veggies or rice & black beans $17
Black Truffle and Cheese Tamales with Sage and Brown Butter, choice of veggies or rice & black beans $17
Braised Lentil & Beef Burrito with Sweet Potato, choice of veggies or rice & black beans $15
Fried Fish Tacos, wild cod, cabbage, sweet-spicy sauce, choice of veggies or rice & black beans $14
Artichoke Heart & Cheese Enchiladas with Tomatillo Sauce with choice of veggies or rice & black beans $17
Chilaquiles (Tortilla Casserole), poached eggs, refried black beans, shredded beef (vegetarian available) $14
Sweet Potato Nachos black beans, cheese, tomato, onion, sour cream, avocado, jalapeno $12
Free-Range Chicken Tacos corn tortillas, bacon, collard greens (vegetarian available) $12
Feijoada (brazilian stewed beef, pork, black beans) rice, collard greens, farofa (toasted yucca meal) $17
Grass-Fed Beef Empanadas or Spinach & Egg Empanadas $9
Butternut Squash Cachapas (venezuelan griddle cakes with melted mozzarella cheese) $9
Arepas (shredded beef or avocado & fresh mozzarella) $9
A feijoada completa is the black bean stew served with rice, farofa (toasted yucca meal, though I always used toasted breadcrumbs, as I was taught by my Brasilian brother Nelson, when we had no yucca meal), collard greens (though since I don't like collard greens, I always served spinach instead) and a slice of orange for decoration. I was pleased to discover that the Tucos feijoada was very similar to what I made...and looked good too.
It was not only a feijoada completa, but a feijoada perfecta
as well!
But the dish I most wanted to try was the pao de queijo, the little
cheese breads you can see in the bowl off to the left in the above picture. I can't find
my recipe any more and a check on the internet yields many variations, none of which sound
familiar, but mainly you have liquid and tapioca flour and cheese and other ingredients.
You mix it all up in a pan, form into a dough, refrigerate, then pinch off tiny
balls of it and bake them.
But the thing about it is that the tapioca flour mixed with liquid
has the consistency of silly putty. I always reached a point somewhere before the
refrigeration stage where I was certain that I had done something horribly wrong. I
had a hard, grey (yes, it was grey) mass that I was putting in the refrigerator. I
got used to it looking so horrible because when I baked the little balls the first time
and they were so delicious that they were devoured instantly, that I never worried about
it again, but I can still remember that really weird feeing in my fingers as I kneaded
it.
The Brasilians told me that it tasted just like the cheese breads
they remembered from home. But until today I had never tasted any cheese breads but
my own. It was so gratifying to discover that they tasted just like I remember
making. The only problem, of course, was that they cost $1 each and mine were
considerably cheaper.
I wonder where I put that recipe.....
No comments:
Post a Comment