Gastronomy
        Food is a central component of the tapestry 
		of Carioca culture, playing an important role in family life and social 
		interactions, and testifying to the historic evolution of the city. 
        
        Gastronomic jewels at bars, restaurants and dinner 
		tables represent a rich, experimental and culturally welcoming society. 
		I LOVE RIO uncovers some of the finest cuisine served at restaurants 
		across the city, from affluent neighborhoods to favelas. The history and 
		development of foundational Carioca dishes are picked apart and 
		presented alongside privileged insider know-how and tips. 
        
         
 
       
 Origins, Traditions, and Gastronomic Culture
        
        
        
        
        Rio de Janeiro's metropolitan menu is largely a 
		product of the important role that the city played in the history of 
		Brazil, attracting and uniting cultures from the whole country and from 
		the rest of the world.
        Rio de Janeiro has been the official capital of the 
		empire and of the republic for centuries, and it has been the de-facto 
		economic and cultural capital of Brazil for most of its existence. As 
		such, the city hosted politicians, diplomats, and royalties each 
		bringing along different tastes and gastronomic desires, influencing the 
		local cuisine.
        Similarly, a result of trade in Rio has welcomed a 
		constant inflow of merchants, immigrants, politicians, and voyagers from 
		everywhere in the world - today, gastronomy in Rio is the result of 
		their respective contributions.
        Along with these influences, modern Carioca cuisine 
		also incorporates indigenous seasonings and recipes, mixed in with both 
		ancient African preparations and traditional Portuguese culinary 
		traditions. The result is the betterment of conventional recipes and the 
		creation of a wide variety of new and unique dishes, with a strong 
		European influence.
        Indigenous influence contributed many fruits, seeds, 
		and nuts such as the cashew, cassava, taro, tamarind, cherry, palm, 
		jaboticaba, jambo, and the sapodilla. Africans were in charge of cooking 
		in colonial Brazil, and they introduced beans, the most typical national 
		dishes, cayenne, olive oil-palm, the dried shrimp, yams, okra, and 
		various herbs used for flavouring - some of these original african 
		recipes are still prepared during important local commemorations, such 
		as Zumbi dos Palmares day.
        Carioca gastronomy owes to Portugal most of its basic 
		European recipes for meat and seafood dishes, salads, soups, desserts, 
		and dry sweets - the Portuguese strongly promoted the consumption of 
		wheat and rice with beef, lamb, pork, fish, soups, fruits, and 
		vegetables.
 
        
        
          Over the course of the city's 450 years of 
			existence, Rio's residents have developed a wonderful culinary 
			flare, incorporating influences, tastes and textures from Africa and 
			Europe, such as feijoada, cod and many delicious dishes from 
			Northeastearn Brazil, adapting them to Indigenous cooking and 
			ingredients such as manioc and coconut. In more recent years, a 
			diverse range of international culinary cultures have taken root, 
			such as Japanese sushi, Mexican empanadas and the French crêpe.
  
         
 
From charming and cheerful bars called 'botecos' selling 
comfort food to high-end experimental cuisine, traditional Brazilian plates to 
exotic international cuisine, there are restaurants across the city to suit 
every mood and palate.
        Globalization, and the recent Brazilian economic boom 
		have further enriched foreign culinary influences, and while maintaining 
		its originality, Carioca gastronomy has now significantly expanded to 
		include some remarkably sophisticated recipes. Today's gastronomy has 
		reached such importance in Rio to result in the creation of a variety of 
		yearly culinary festivals and competitions such as the Rio's Festival 
		Gastronomico, the Degusta Rio, and the hosting of the worlds' Pasta 
		Congress.
        Brazilian cuisine is now one of the richest in the 
		world, and while typical regional dishes can vary greatly throughout 
		Brazilian territory, in Rio de Janeiro feijoada stands out, along with 
		the 'leão veloso' shrimp soup.
        
        
        
         
        
          Feijoada, Brazil's national dish reached the status 
			of most typical national dish and it is the most widely known 
			outside of Brazil and a symbol of Brazilian cuisine.
 
         
        
        
        There are four main types of restaurants in Rio de 
		Janeiro - rodizios, churrascarias, kilos, and 'a-la-carte'. Given any 
		type of food, each type of restaurant offers a unique take and 
		experience in the way dishes are served and enjoyed.
        Rodizios are extremely popular establishments where a 
		fixed price is charged and unlimited courses are served at the table 
		with no additional charges - drinks, coffee, and desserts are usually 
		charged separately. Rodizios are truly loved in Rio, and even regular 
		restaurants may convert to rodizios for the week-end: in fact, several 
		well established high-end restaurants now offer rodizios during lunch 
		hours.
        Typical rodizio offerings include pizza, appetizers, 
		pasta, and meat. In touristy areas such as Ipanema and Copacabana 
		rodizios of sushi are now increasingly available. Rodizios can range 
		from very affordable and simple diners to very expensive and posh 
		restaurants.
        
		Churrascarias are a type of rodizio, but they 
		specialize in serving meat and because of their extreme popularity are 
		normally classified is a class of their own - in these restaurants 
		waiters continuously come to the tables and slice different types of 
		meat directly into the customers' plates. A red and green paper signal 
		is given to the clients to signal the waiters to either keep or stop 
		coming.
        Churrascarias also offer a buffet table where clients 
		can self-serve various additional side dishes such as vegetables, 
		pastas, risottos, breads, cheeses, cold cuts, soups, and condiments. 
		High-end churrascarias also include fish and sushi on the buffet table - 
		for vegans, it is possible to accompany their meat-loving friends and 
		enjoy a full meat-free meal just with the side dishes. High-end 
		churrascarias serve special meats, such as rabbit and ostrich at no 
		extra charge, but these dishes may not be on the menu and have to be 
		specifically asked for - drinks, coffee, and desserts are never included 
		in the fixed price and are generally expensive compared to the price of 
		the courses.
        Kilos are restaurants where clients serve themselves 
		at a main table and then weigh their plates and get billed accordingly 
		by weight. Kilos often offer a 'fixo' rate, which allows for unlimited 
		servings at a fixed price - normally this rate is not plainly visible or 
		advertised and must be inquired about. Most kilos have a basic 
		churrascaria as well, offering a nice variety of meats. These cuts are 
		usually located separately from the main food tables, and meats are cut 
		and prepared to order.
        High-end kilos also offer sushi as part of the buffet 
		- additionally, they can offer sashimi of salmon or tuna, but these must 
		be specifically asked for and are weighted on a separate dish, and are 
		billed at a higher rate.
        A-la-carte are the typical restaurants where dishes 
		are ordered from a fixed menu - there is a great variety of restaurants 
		a-la-carte in Rio, serving dishes ranging from typical Brazilian to 
		contemporary Asian, Fusion, Ethnic, and Vegan.
        
        
        
        
          The culturally diverse and imaginative 'a-la-carte' 
			restaurants that line the streets of the city are another excellent 
			example of local creativity. Japanese food arrived with the large 
			influx of Japanese immigrants in the early 20th Century and his 
			since become a trendy option amongst Cariocas.
  
         
 
        
        
        French cuisine, in all its forms and much of its 
		sophistication, has also been embraced with arms wide open by the people 
		of Rio de Janeiro. Crêpe restaurants abound, And gourmet Parisian 
		cuisine can be found in eateries in Leblon and Copacabana.
                
        Many restaurants offer dishes and flavours from 
		around Brazil, as well as wider South America, serving delightful 
		Peruvian food of Inca origin. Rio de Janeiro has adopted other culinary 
		trends over the years, with a wide range of stylish and inventive 
		vegetarian and vegan restaurants. 
        
        
        
          In full appreciation of Cariocas' great affinity 
			and affection for food and music, bars and restaurants in Rio 
			commonly intertwine the two, providing customers with live musical 
			performances as they eat. Many of the bars and clubs that line the 
			streets of neighbourhoods such as Lapa offer mesmerising samba shows 
			with traditional menus alongside.
  
         
 
  		In Rio de Janeiro, the rich culinary cultures of the 
		world are fused together with a playful twist, creating a uniquely 
		diverse and imaginative Carioca menu.
        Called 'Feijoada,' The Brazilian national dish is a 
		black bean stew, containing up to thirteen varieties of pork and sausage 
		cuts, as well as optional vegetables. Many historians believe it derives 
		from stews consumed in Southern Europe at the time of Portuguese 
		colonization. The beans and meat, stewed for hours, are rich, creamy and 
		unique and restaurants across the city compete to produce the very 
		finest specimen of this Brazilian delicacy.
		The famous Brazilian barbecue, called 'churrasco' was 
		born in the Brazilian state of Rio Grande do Sul, when a pioneering 
		cattle farmer decided to grill meat on wooden skewers over a fire, 
		seasoned exclusively by coarse salt. While barbeques are often hosted in 
		homes, grilled meat restaurants have truly earned Rio its fame. The 
		'rodízio' (rotation) system is what lends Churrascarias their unique 
		character and appeal – a continual stream of succulent meat cuts are 
		brought to customers' tables and sliced before their eyes, accompanied 
		by a vast array of side dishes, salads, pastries, and sushi.
		The Portuguese first introduced chickens to Brazil in 
		the early 20th Century and early aviculture in the country was known as 
		'frango caipira', meaning 'rustic chicken'. Today, Brazil is one of the 
		largest exporteres of chicken meat in the world. All across Rio, one can 
		find evidence that Cariocas are well-versed chicken chefs and consumers, 
		and have perfected the art of fillings, as well as expertly grilled 
		cuts. Walking past bars and shops, residents and visitors are regularly 
		greeted by the rich and tantalising smell of spit-roasted whole 
		chickens.
		
 
		Rio de Janeiro has a long fishing history, and at one 
		time held the title of highest fishing yield of all states. 'Bacalhau', 
		or Cod, is a very popular fish in Brazil , and the word now refers to a 
		delicately honed national dish, famously enjoyed at Christmas. Bacalhau 
		was introduced to Brazil by the Portuguese court in the early 19th 
		Century.
		
 
		An impressive number of seafood meals come from the 
		Northeast of Brazil. 'Moqueca de Peixe,' a fish stew that originates 
		from indigenous tribes in Bahia, is traditionally cooked in a clay pot, 
		with coconut milk, palm oil and a choice selection of fish. 'Acarajé' is 
		a wonderfully unique African-Brazilian dish made of traditional 
		black-eyed beans, onion, salt and palm oil, first recorded in Bahia in 
		1916. The ingredients are rolled into a ball, somewhat like a falafel, 
		which is then cut in half and served with a filling of pigweed, steamed 
		shrimp, pepper and salad.
		Cariocas adore their pastries, sweets and snacks, 
		which can be found in almost every bar, restaurant and home in the city. 
		They are eaten at the tables of just about everyone, from small shops at 
		the top of favelas, to sophisticated champagne dinners in posh district 
		Leblon. One of the most beloved of the Brazilian savoury pastries is the 
		'coxinha', a tear-drop shaped, chicken-filled, soft pastry, coated in 
		bread-crumbs, said to have originated from São Paulo in the late 19th 
		Century. Side by side with the coxinha, one can always find a wide 
		assortment of 'Pasteis', or pastries. These are filled with both 
		traditional and contemporary fillings, including most commonly cheese, 
		ham, minced meat and prawn.
		'Brigadeiro' is the archetypal Brazilian sweet – the 
		decadent guest at every party and the popular treat in Cariocas' 
		cupboards. It is a soft and indulgent truffle formed of condensed milk, 
		chocolate and butter, coated in sprinkles. The name means, 'brigadier', 
		as a tribute to Brigadier Eduardo Gomes who ran for President of the 
		Republic in 1946. Sweet and savoury snacks are in many ways the staple 
		of the Brazilian diet, and something that Cariocas feel great pride 
		about.
 
 
          Anyone visiting Rio de Janeiro will be greeted by a 
			tantalizing 'caipirinha' - the celebrated Brazilian cocktail made of 
			lemon, crushed ice, sugar and 'cachaça,' a sugarcane spirit. There 
			are also delicious twists on the classic, using vodka instead of 
			cachaça and passion fruit, kiwi or mango instead of lemon.
  
          
 
		Brazil's fruit offerings are some of the sweetest and 
		most succulent the world over. Called 'sucos', there is a huge variety 
		of freshly made fruit juices on offer in Rio: from the traditional 
		orange and apple, to the more tropical options of guava, papaya, mango 
		and jackfruit. Fruit juices are an extremely popular component of 
		Carioca diet and lifestyle. Coconut water is the darling of Rio's 
		residents, and can be bought from any coastal kiosk or street vendor.
 		'Açaí' is a celebrated tropical 'super-food' which 
		can be consumed in a number of different forms, including juices, 
		smoothies and sorbets – often sprinkled with sweet and crunchy granola, 
		banana, strawberries and honey.
		No matter the food or the occasion, beer has been a 
		landmark drink in Rio for a long time, where the first records of its 
		consumption date back to the 17th Century. Nowadays, at all big social 
		events, street parties and buzzing squares, street vendors sell cans and 
		bottles from big, portable ice boxes and locals stands. Traditionally, 
		as important as the make of the beer, so is its temperaure: the colder 
		the better!