Minggu, 10 Oktober 2010

Hispanic History Month and Foodways Series: Nineteenth Century Brazil

Coarse sea salted marinated and pan fried sardines, sardine recipes below


The Parisian Adèle Toussaint-Samson (1826-1886) traveled to Brazil in the early 1850s where she would live with her husband and children for twelve years. Toussaint-Samson had a wealthy uncle who lived in Rio. Toussaint-Samson became a keen observer of Brazilian foodways including seafood and African slavery; Brazil was the last country in the Americas to abolish slavery in 1888. She provides a wonderful description of a fish market in Rio “where abound sardines, shrimps, oysters, and delicious fishes, which are bought alive.” She goes on to describe a female Afro-Brazilian street vender near the market selling “smoking batatas doces [sweet potato dish], fried sardines, and some angú” (manioc flour gravy) under a large linen umbrella. Here are two Brazilian sardine recipes appropriate for this memory of fish in nineteenth Rio.


Brazilian fried sardine recipe: http://www.all-fish-seafood-recipes.com/index.cfm/recipe/Sardinas_Fritas


Marinated pan fried sardine recipe: http://www.audreycooks.com/audreycooks/?p=394


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