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Why Portuguese Food is Hiding Everywhere 

Matthew Li
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Cultures and cuisines inspire each other all around the world, especially in the last few decades. But Portugal seems to be a special case. It's a not a cuisine that's in the spotlight a lot, yet a lot of very different countries around the world have a dish that has some sort of Portuguese influence. Today, I skim through some of the biggest examples of Portuguese food hiding in other cuisines and briefly look into the different historical reasons to how it happened.
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SOCIAL MEDIA:
Twitter - / itsmatthewli
Instagram - / randomchino
Credits:
Producer - Matthew Li
Production Assistant - Mana Chuabang
Script Supervisor - Russ Medcalf
Special thanks:
Louis Glover
Yusef Iqbal
Yeevonne Lim
Jason Rolfe
Brandon Goddard
Dylan Payne
Music from Musicbed
SOURCES:
Taste of Lisboa | Foods you didn’t know were Portuguese - bit.ly/443wEGg
BBC | History of Fish & Chips - bbc.in/3Ay1GbU
The Independent | History of Fish & Chips - bit.ly/3NicQco
The Independent | History of Nando's - bit.ly/3Hgtoxu
Cook's Country | History of Hawaiian Sweet Bread - bit.ly/3LcHiBO
BBC | History of Tempura - bbc.in/3AChCcR
UOL | History of Feijoada - bit.ly/3VcGf9Q
Times of India | History of Vindaloo - bit.ly/423DTMH
TasteAtlas | History of Foi Thong - bit.ly/3HbQsgD
Timestamps:
0:00 - Asian desserts that are actually from Portugal
2:06 - Japan
3:16 - Malaysia
4:09 - India
5:01 - Southern Africa
5:50 - United Kingdom
6:52 - Brazil
8:08 - United States of America
9:00 - Why Portuguese Cuisine is so Special

Опубликовано:

 

15 июн 2024

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Комментарии : 4,3 тыс.   
@armorv1531
@armorv1531 Год назад
Dude, I'm sorry but I looked all over my apartment. I wasted my time. There was no Portuguese food hiding anywhere. Maybe I will search my car next...
@offthemenuyt
@offthemenuyt Год назад
Damn, sorry I was wrong
@ThePmso
@ThePmso Год назад
Look if you have canned tuna or sardines. We were the ones who popularized the canned tuna and sardines to the general public
@rabbitazteca23
@rabbitazteca23 Год назад
Haaha same
@rabbitazteca23
@rabbitazteca23 Год назад
@@ThePmso sorry we don't have those in my pamtry. I think my cat's pantry might hav3 some. Does can of mushrooms count?
@viriatobr6102
@viriatobr6102 Год назад
Portuguese food hides well
@hershdawgmusic
@hershdawgmusic Год назад
The British drinking tea was influenced by Catherine of Braganza, who was queen of England but was a Portuguese royal
@luismarques9280
@luismarques9280 Год назад
Exactly
@EmotionsToBurn-mi8fv
@EmotionsToBurn-mi8fv Год назад
m.ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-VVISjoNAdG8.html
@saragomes6242
@saragomes6242 Год назад
Bragança
@luisoliveira1690
@luisoliveira1690 Год назад
Catarina of Bragança
@Paulo37580
@Paulo37580 Год назад
@@anacasimiro5993 That's absolutely fantastic. Thanks for adding this piece of information. A Brazilian here.
@oldgreg506
@oldgreg506 Год назад
It wasn’t until I visited Portugal until I realized how good their cuisine is. Definitely underrated
@the_greatest_unicorn
@the_greatest_unicorn Год назад
Glad you like it. I miss it so much ever since I moved to the UK. The bakeries with pastries and freshly made bread are what I miss the most.
@FlipOver
@FlipOver Год назад
I was afraid the cat would be out of the bag sooner or later...
@TiagoArderius
@TiagoArderius Год назад
@@the_greatest_unicorn estamos na mesma situacao xd, estou aqui a 7 anos.
@ziimaz5425
@ziimaz5425 Год назад
@Mel C no one asked
@ROCKYPLAYA
@ROCKYPLAYA Год назад
@@melc4308 You must be a very depressed person. My condolences.
@odkings3437
@odkings3437 Год назад
Portugal is one the most underrated countries, there so much story and influence on the world compared to its size, its insane.
@jubernardi23
@jubernardi23 25 дней назад
I agree 100%! He is not underrated but also defamd because of the black legend of "Englnd"🥰 I’m really proud and luck to be Portuguese descendent too as a Brazilian 😍
@MGBranco
@MGBranco 25 дней назад
French couzine? Plz...try Portuguese ok? French wine? Ahahahahhaa! Borde... what? Plz...learn with the Portuguese ok?
@Auloss
@Auloss 24 дня назад
@@jubernardi23 n sabe falar nem tenta mano, pqp , simplesmente ininteligivel
@javiskii
@javiskii Год назад
Spaniard here, Portuguese food is the best in the peninsula, and I'm so glad they're our neighbours, territorially and culinarily
@oldwine2401
@oldwine2401 Год назад
thank you , both have a good cuisine
@Lusitano-uw1je
@Lusitano-uw1je 11 месяцев назад
Astúrias,terra e povo maravilhoso gastronomia excelente
@jh5kl
@jh5kl 10 месяцев назад
Viva os Ibericos! ❤💪
@Lusitano-uw1je
@Lusitano-uw1je 10 месяцев назад
@@jh5kl Viva,só temos que manter nossas tradições
@RenataAOVeiga
@RenataAOVeiga 10 месяцев назад
Ohhh❤❤
@kikoempis
@kikoempis Год назад
A little correction. Portugal didn’t have one colony in India. Besides Goa, Portugal held Diu, Daman, Dadrá, Mangalore, Kannur, Kollam, Nagapattinam, Hoogly, and Bombay. Bombay was given to England as a wedding present for princess Catherine of Braganza, who married Charles II of England. Ceylon (Sri Lanka) has been a portuguese colony. In Japan, Portugal “founded” Nagasaky. Macau in China. And many other cities and trade posts in Africa and the Middle East, on the way to India. In Indonesia PT had Malacca (Malasya) Timor (Leste), the Moloucas, Sunda, Banda, etc. The Portuguese were everywhere at that time. They dominated the indian ocean.
@UniDocs_Mahapushpa_Cyavana
@UniDocs_Mahapushpa_Cyavana Год назад
@Quest Immigrants don't demographically represent the average of their home countries. Sometimes the difference is drastic.
@ZecaPinto1
@ZecaPinto1 Год назад
Nagasaki was the first city the portuguese visited when they arrived ín Japan
@luizbag
@luizbag Год назад
And that princess, Catherine, married Charles II and took the habit of drinking tea to England!!!
@UniDocs_Mahapushpa_Cyavana
@UniDocs_Mahapushpa_Cyavana Год назад
@@ZecaPinto1 They said they founded it. 😕
@joaome1
@joaome1 Год назад
More about the tea. A fun legend has it that the crates were marked Transporte de Ervas Aromaticas (Transport of Aromatic Herbs) - later abbreviated to T.E.A.
@TJSaw
@TJSaw Год назад
Fun fact: The Portuguese introduced potatoes to India and we’ve been using them ever since. Can’t imagine Indian cuisine without potatoes now.
@ericktellez7632
@ericktellez7632 Год назад
Potatoes, Tomatoes and some chilies native to mesoamerica that the Portuguese and Spanish took to India for trading also chocolate or cacao from central america
@Kaiyanwang82
@Kaiyanwang82 3 месяца назад
Not completely related, but as Italian I cannot imagine my cuisine without tomatoes but they are so relatively recent!
@santostv.
@santostv. 29 дней назад
Funny,because we Portuguese love rice ,we consume more rice than other European countries meanwhile they prefer potatoes 😂
@mistersomerton
@mistersomerton 24 дня назад
​@@ericktellez7632you're correct
@user-vh5jw1fv8u
@user-vh5jw1fv8u 24 дня назад
Can't imagine Europan cuisine without potatoes .
@sundancetitan5675
@sundancetitan5675 3 месяца назад
One non culinary fact: after the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki it was Portuguese aid workers who where the first foreign volunteers to assist in medical aid and help
@MrDantres
@MrDantres 20 дней назад
Obrigado, I didn't know that!
@FallenLight0
@FallenLight0 Год назад
Fun Fact: Portugal was the first country to translate japanese to westerners, they created the first romaji system and also the first dictionary of japanese-european language (portuguese).
@jeanlundi2141
@jeanlundi2141 11 месяцев назад
Wow is the romaji thing true? I'm portuguese, learned a but of japanese and never heard that one before.
@FallenLight0
@FallenLight0 11 месяцев назад
@@jeanlundi2141 it's true search for: Nippo Jisho "O Vocabvlario da Lingoa de Iapam ou Vocabulário da Língua do Japão é um dicionário de japonês-português, o primeiro a traduzir o japonês para uma língua ocidental. Foi compilado por missionários jesuítas portugueses e publicado em Nagasáqui, no Japão em 1603."
@MegaSreis
@MegaSreis 10 месяцев назад
A Portuguese priest (along with a French Priest) was also the one who transformed the Vietnamese way of writing to the way it is today.
@jeanlundi2141
@jeanlundi2141 10 месяцев назад
@@MegaSreis That's crazy. Didn't know any of this.
@Hittdogg17
@Hittdogg17 7 месяцев назад
Abrigardo.. arrigato
@j.carloscosta6351
@j.carloscosta6351 Год назад
Names origin: Vindaloo = "Vinha de Alhos" (wine and garlic marinade). Tempura = Time of preparation for Easter (Lent ?), in latin, "ad TEMPORA quadragesimae", because the jesuits didn't eat meat during Lent and deep fried their fish and legumes. Castela = comes from the expression "claras batidas em Castelo" (beaten egg whites) used in that cake. And it is very similar to a protuguese cake named "Pão de Ló". Foy Thong = "Fios de Ovos" (egg yarns), very common in Portuguese pastry. By the way: tomatoes, peppers and chillies, originary from the Americas, were most probably brought to Africa and Asia by the Portuguese sea trade routes.
@j.carloscosta6351
@j.carloscosta6351 Год назад
Ah, and "Kristang" sounds almost exactly like "Cristãos" wich means christians...
@ValdemarDeMatos
@ValdemarDeMatos Год назад
👌
@keo872
@keo872 Год назад
And Pineapple from Asia to America, tobacco was also from the America to Europe ( I heard syphilis was part of the trade too)
@pmlb7715
@pmlb7715 Год назад
America-to-Africa-to-Asia trade route was indeed Portuguese, but America-to-Asia trade route was Spanish, via the Philippines.
@carlosalba9690
@carlosalba9690 Год назад
I noted when he mentioned chiles native to South Africa normally I don’t care since colloquially people just say this for locally created cultivars but it’s very important when talking about global exchange that we note it isn’t native to South Africa. Also as a Mexican it hurt me a little if I’m being honest 😂
@ghotiiii1
@ghotiiii1 Год назад
Here's a few more; Britain's national drink (tea) was taken to Britain by the Portuguese, and popularised the Portuguese wife of Charles II (Catherine of Bragança). Also marmelade is from Portugal too; 'marmelada' originally made from quince ('marmelo'), was given to medieval Portuguese sailors to combat scurvy. Finally, the practice of arresting fermentation to make fortified wines (like brandy, sherry etc.) was first used with Port wine, from Portugal (and, later, Madeira wine) in order to stop it turning to vinegar on long sea journeys. A correction however; In Portugal chicken peri-peri (known as 'frango piri-piri) is universally regarded as a dish brought FROM, not taken to, Africa. It is derived from the West African dish 'chicken cafriella' (made with palm oil and lots of paprika), popularised by Portuguese returning from Angola, Guinea Bissau and the São Tomé & Príncipe islands.
@vanessasanha528
@vanessasanha528 Год назад
OMG WHEN I WAS GROWING UP IN PORTUGAL THEY TAUGHT US HOW TO MAKE MARMELADA AT SCHOOL 🤯🤯
@nickmahendra136
@nickmahendra136 Год назад
In Hawaii you also have the famous Hula Hula chicken which was introduced by Portuguese immigrants who incidentally also introduced the Ukelele or Cavaquinho in Potuguese😊
@luiscostaalves8849
@luiscostaalves8849 Год назад
In fact there's no strong evidences about the tea. The Portuguese use to say that as an honor fact but there's no clear evidence that it happens that way.
@tatianaferreira5998
@tatianaferreira5998 Год назад
I'm Portuguese and I always have homemade marmalade at home. My mom does it once a year, but it holds all year. Also my mom is originally from Madeira, so we also have Madeira wine and liquor (poncha). Port wine is also very common to find in a Portuguese house.😊
@ricardolouro9545
@ricardolouro9545 Год назад
​@@luiscostaalves8849well tea time wasn't an UK thing before that Queen, and Portugal was the only european country with real access to tea leaves. There are a lot of evidence. What there isnt enough evidence is about the origin of the word TEA because some believe it means Transporte de Ervas Aromáticas (TEA) or Aromatic Herbs Transportation
@CarloRegadasGuitar
@CarloRegadasGuitar Год назад
I'm half Portuguese, born and raised in Liverpool, UK, although my dad was from Braga, Portugal. He had a Portuguese restaurant in Liverpool city centre when I was a kid and he was an amazing chef. He taught me everything I know about food. O esplendor de Portugal 🇵🇹
@MsCarmenxita
@MsCarmenxita Год назад
Now u have another good one from a guy from Madeira island. I have been there allready
@vanessasanha528
@vanessasanha528 Год назад
Entre as brumas da Victoria…
@simplydesignlife
@simplydesignlife Год назад
Did you the origin of word tea comes from Portugal too? It stands for transporte ervas aromáticas. The Portuguese where the great navigators! We were all over the world. It’s part of our history.
@joaocanela5875
@joaocanela5875 Год назад
actually, we might not have the best cuisine, but ee indeed know how to eat. We dont eat just a nail size meat and a lettuce leave. We like to eat
@DiogoSilva-vi2wi
@DiogoSilva-vi2wi Год назад
Braga é a cidade
@BellaLu1sa
@BellaLu1sa Год назад
Portuguese cuisine is underrated because portuguese people underrrate themselves! Stop saying Portugal is a tiny/small country! Google countries by size to discover lots of countries that would never speak of themselves as small! Believe me, I was born here and I'm still living here! Portuguese cuisine is great and a result of Portugal's history. Thank you for your fabulous video! Congratulations!
@PORTUGAL-AD-AETERNUM
@PORTUGAL-AD-AETERNUM Год назад
PORTUGAL É GRANDE E LINDO!!! ORGULHO EM SER PORTUGUÊS 💪🏻🇵🇹❤️👍🏻
@brunoquelhas8786
@brunoquelhas8786 Год назад
Sou brasileiro, filho de português e vivo em Portugal desde 1996 (Embora agora trabalhe fora, como tantos outros portugueses), e isso foi sempre algo que incomodou, esta mentalidade do "pequenino". Sempre que ouço "é porque somos pequeninos" pergunto logo: E o Luxemburgo é o que, c@r@lh#??? E a Bélgica? E a Holanda? Enfim, esta mentalidade é o que mata Portugal.
@StellaEFZ
@StellaEFZ 11 месяцев назад
Portugal? Safoda eles
@jorgeguerra9599
@jorgeguerra9599 27 дней назад
@@brunoquelhas8786 "é porque somos pequeninos" e somos. Falar do passado orgulhosamente e sem ter a capacidade de ser como fomos outrora, mostra a nossa pequenez. Somos uma cambada de grunhos sem capacidade de escolher um governo decente, sem ter um governo decente. Vicemos à custa da esmola do FMI.... só me sobra enquanto português e um que imigrou várias vezes, sentir vergonha alheia de vangloriar um passado que não somos nem seremos capazes de lhe fazer jus. è triste mas não podemos fazer mais do falar do passado. Por isso a mentalidade de que falas (na minha opinião) é o que mata Portugal.
@jubernardi23
@jubernardi23 25 дней назад
Most of brazilain(and also Latin people) are mix race and descendentes of first native South Americans and portugueses Many of principal cities and states in Brazil were found by them like SP, com a fundação geralmente de uma escola,igreja ou mosteiro e casamento entre os nativos sul americanos com os portugueses Tibiriçá (born on an unknown date and place - São Paulo dos Campos de Piratininga, December 25, 1562) was an important Tupiniquim indigenous leader from the beginnings of the Portuguese colonization of Brazil. He was an ally of the Portuguese. It stood out in the events related to the foundation of the current city of São Paulo, in 1554 . Cacique of the tribe of the Guaianase Indians, he was the brother of the caciques Caiubi, Piquerobi and Araraí. Converted to Catholicism and baptized by Father Leonardo Nunes, with the collaboration of Brother José de Anchieta, he adopted the name of Martim Afonso Tibiriçá, in honor of the founder of the village of São Vicente, of whom he was a dedicated friend. He was the head of a huge part of the indigenous nation established in the fields of Piratininga, based in the village of Inhapuambuçu. His daughter M´bicy, also known as Bartira, married João Ramalho. Tibiriçá collaborated in the foundation of the Village of Piratininga, on 19/8/1553, and with the Jesuit College, on 25/1/1554, establishing himself in the place where the Monastery of São Bento stands today. He participated effectively in the defense of the village, which, on 9/7/1562, was attacked by the Tupis, Guaianás and Carijós Indians, headed by his nephew Jagoanharo, he was the son of Araraí, who had, shortly before, as an emissary of the tamoios, talked to reconsider his position in favor of the Portuguese and ally himself with his indigenous brothers. Tibiriçá, in the confessional, told the fact to Anchieta, and he took the information to the Portuguese chiefs. In a letter written on 4/16/1563, Brother José de Anchieta expressed himself as follows: “He was buried in our church with great honor, accompanying him to all Portuguese Christians with the wax of his brotherhood. The whole Captaincy stayed with a great feeling of his death for the lack they feel, because this was what sustained all the others, knowing themselves thank you very much for the work he took to defend the land, more than everyone I believe we owe him those of the company and so he decided to take him into account not only as a benefactor, but also as a founder and conservative of the House of Piratininga and our lives. He made a will and passed away with great signs of piety and faith, recommending his wife and children that they always honor the true religion they embraced.” His remains rest today in the crypt of the Metropolitan Cathedral of São Paulo, in Praça da Sé. In his honor, the state highway SP-031, connecting Ribeirão Pires to Suzano, was called Índio Tibiriçá which had the baptismal name Martim Afonso. BARTIRA Daughter of the cacique Tibiriçá. M´bicy (Tree Flôr), also known as Bartira or Potira. He married João Ramalho, presumably in 1515, with whom he lived for more than forty years. Its name was changed to Izabel Dias, after being baptized in the Catholic religion by the Jesuits, on the plateau of Piratininga. They had nine children, and from this union descend countless of the most traditional families in São Paulo, etc. You really don’t know our history and also the slvery was not what you though and better than if they would sell too arbs. Portugueses(my ancestors and most of Brazilian people) build the most amazing things here(arquitetura, parks, infrastructure)and we are a part of the 🇵🇹It was called overseas territory no a colony and the capital of the Monrchy even movie from Portugal during a period of time. I agree 100% And most because the britsh made a " blac legend" against y’all In fact Portuguese and Spaniards were the best in the worlds ❤ I love Brazil but I also love 🇵🇹 so much ❤ A virgem de Fátima abençoes ricamente hoje e sempre 🙏🏽
@LarryNgetich
@LarryNgetich Год назад
I'm Kenyan, and the Portuguese were also here first among the Europeans. With them they brought spices, and Kenyan coastal cuisine is the spiciest of all Kenyan foods. Of course tere is also some Arab and Indian influence in there, but that Portuguese touch is still there. A sidenote. Swahili, despite being a Bantu language with Bantu grammar has remarkably heavy Portuguese influence and loan words. It's like the English of Africa.
@hotman_pt_
@hotman_pt_ Год назад
there's a cool old portuguese fort in Mombaça i would like to check. You can also find some old portuguese infraestructure in Melinde, where you can find the Pillar of Vasco da Gama, aswell as a museum and a chapel.
@LarryNgetich
@LarryNgetich Год назад
@@hotman_pt_ Yeah, it's called Fort Jesus. The Portuguese abandoned it during battle and those left inside starved to death. It used to have bones and everything.
@yashagrawal88
@yashagrawal88 Год назад
Portuguese brought a lot of foods from South America to Africa and Asia.
@infinite5795
@infinite5795 Год назад
@@LarryNgetich those spices actually came from India via the Portuguese, since 75-85% of all spices in the world were produced in India then( its sadly 80% now). Portugal doesn't use or have any native spices other than olive or oreganos.
@gabe5109
@gabe5109 Год назад
@@LarryNgetichfoi realmente horrível
@lordcommandernox9197
@lordcommandernox9197 Год назад
The thing is, most Portuguese people know about all of this, but whenever we say: "oh yeah, we were involved in that!", people roll their eyes like we're crazy.
@luismarques9280
@luismarques9280 Год назад
Not hard to believe if you think Portuguese sailors sailed almost the all globe....
@Luzitanium
@Luzitanium Год назад
no, not even the portuguese know these.
@borja1000
@borja1000 Год назад
Totally! Happens to me all the time.
@bananaempijama
@bananaempijama Год назад
We were everywhere. Even today, there is a Portuguese in every corner of the world 😊
@jasonhaven7170
@jasonhaven7170 Год назад
@@luismarques9280 To be pirates.
@marlonduarte
@marlonduarte Год назад
Hi there! As a Luso-Brazilian, I moved from Minas/Brazil, to Lisbon when I was 10. Now, at the age of 26, I find this video to be epic and awesome! Here's my theory on why Portuguese food has invisible roots everywhere: Firstly, I believe Portuguese people are incredibly ingenious and courageous. Their food stems from a combination of spices and condiments they introduced to other places and brought home, with a strong Iberian influence (looking at you, olive oil!). Therefore, it's not just about the dishes themselves, but the ingredients they use, cultivated and influenced. Secondly, Portuguese people aren't boastful, which often leads to them missing out on well-deserved recognition for their contributions. 1 I'm proud of my brasillian roots and my portuguese homeland, awesome video mate! Subbed!
@gustavpts
@gustavpts Год назад
as a portuguese person, ur making a real good impression and transmitting a really good view of portugal, sadly portugal ain’t that famous but people like u are slowly changing that. thanks for the video❤️🇵🇹
@RosadosVentos963
@RosadosVentos963 Год назад
Percebe mais da história do que muitos portugueses. Gostei bastante , está a fazer o que se calhar alguns deviam de fazer e ter um pouco de orgulho e dignidade pelo país em que nasceram e vivem. Mas prontos. Gratidão,pelo seu conhecimento e trabalho.❤️
@Ana-ri2io
@Ana-ri2io Год назад
*you are
@afonsopolidoanacleto4285
@afonsopolidoanacleto4285 Год назад
​@@Ana-ri2io bruh
@afonsopolidoanacleto4285
@afonsopolidoanacleto4285 Год назад
​@@RosadosVentos963 🇵🇹❤belas palavras
@LuisPereira-dz9in
@LuisPereira-dz9in Год назад
Portugal was the first global empire in history, so besides the countrys you've talked, you have also cuisine influences in Ceuta; Guiné - Bissau; S. Tomé e Príncipe, Canárias and Madagáscar.
@reddevilparatrooper
@reddevilparatrooper Год назад
I grew up in Hawaii the Portuguese brought foods like Malasadas which is like a fried bread coated in sugar, Portuguese sausage which is linguicia for a very popular breakfast sausage. Tempura was brought in by the Japanese from Portuguese influence and loved by the Hawaiians also. The other item that Hawaiians love is Butter Fish on their Bento lunch plates which is battered cod fish similar to fish and chips in England. Portuguese bean soup is popular around any holiday or events. Also not on the food subject, the Portuguese also invented the Hawaiian Ukulele, and miniature guitar still popular in Hawaiian culture. The Portuguese left many foot prints around the world.
@EmotionsToBurn-mi8fv
@EmotionsToBurn-mi8fv Год назад
m.ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-VVISjoNAdG8.html
@josesousa272
@josesousa272 Год назад
Malasadas are from Portuguese islands, Azores.
@reddevilparatrooper
@reddevilparatrooper Год назад
@@josesousa272 A big favorite in Hawaii. Many Portuguese descendants that immigrated to Hawaii are from the Azores.
@cheehee808_
@cheehee808_ Год назад
Haha i just commented something similar, born and raised in hawaii. Just made some portuguese bean soup the other day as a matter of fact. Delicious 😂
@anthonybird546
@anthonybird546 Год назад
I was in Hawaii for six months for work and breakfast scramble with the Portuguese sausage from 7-11 was sssooooo good
@jonpirovsky
@jonpirovsky Год назад
Portuguese cuisine is DEFINITELY underrated. It is incredible!
@fernandocosta7784
@fernandocosta7784 Год назад
Yes, it's incredible, because is a sinthesis, but bad known ... and operated along the time, after the knowledge of several products and fruits all over the continents ...
@bvbxiong5791
@bvbxiong5791 Год назад
Portuguese just needs a generation of super temperamental diva chefs like France and Italy to get it's cuisine recognized.
@Philix22
@Philix22 Год назад
As I usually say, Portuguese are the best in produting things and the worst in selling it. That's why only now the world is discovering this gem, Portugal.
@oldwine2401
@oldwine2401 Год назад
@@Philix22 is true, because we were very closed country to europe in the past very open to others continents , and we see that in the video.
@yafetkasalie8070
@yafetkasalie8070 Год назад
​@@bvbxiong5791 Eh... No... you know what happened to the Chats after that Diva...😂
@antoniapereiraoficial
@antoniapereiraoficial Год назад
I am Portuguese and happy to help you find these treasures. Rissol, pastel, panado, tempura, maranho, bucho recheado, pão de lo, chanfana, bolo rei, pudim de ovos, trouxas, pastel de nata, pão, ovos moles, doces convenruais... Among many others. The 2 cakes that are more sold in China are Portuguese😊😊
@paulofutremoreira2665
@paulofutremoreira2665 Год назад
Caralho... desculpa.... estou surpreendido com o vídeo.... e ainda posso por algo como açorda. Pasteis bacalhau. Migas. E pah e um Filhoses deles
@becaz
@becaz Год назад
​@@paulofutremoreira2665 és mesmo um tuga tu não enganas ninguém hahaha
@ingbor4768
@ingbor4768 Год назад
O que raio é maranho? Nunca comi disso, de certeza.
@becaz
@becaz Год назад
@@ingbor4768 é tipo estômago de cabra recheado de arroz com hortelã. Parece nojento mas é uma delícia
@alyzesouza
@alyzesouza Год назад
iKE MEU MUNINOS
@maxmedeirosborges2437
@maxmedeirosborges2437 Месяц назад
Brazil, as a Portuguese colony, received hundreds of tropical plants from Asia, Africa and Oceania (cumin, garlic, soybeans, sugar cane, coffee, etc.). At the same time, they took plants from the Americas to the world, such as (corn, cassava, potatoes, tomatoes, cashews, etc.). We Brazilians, when we travel, rarely eat something completely new, there is always something familiar.
@mffmoniz2948
@mffmoniz2948 Год назад
When folks talk about food from Europe they always speak mostly about Italy and France. Portugal has amazing food. Every small village has its own cheese, whine, sausage, bread, sauce recipe, etc. Lots of it is created to bring out the flavours of the ingredients, not hide or disguise them. It is usually not very spicy or hot, except for certain dishes, but it also allows to add more spices or making it hotter while not altering the recipe and taste too much. Pastries is an entire universe on its own. As well as bread. We influenced a lot of countries and cultures and were influenced as well. I think almost anyone can visit Portugal and find flavours they will enjoy.
@Portugalisbased
@Portugalisbased Год назад
as a portuguese, thanks man! definetly try the francesinhas and the pastas de nata and maybe even tripas à moda do porto
@VLAPP0
@VLAPP0 Год назад
​@@Portugalisbased tripas 🤤
@Portugalisbased
@Portugalisbased Год назад
@@VLAPP0 true they are so good man
@draganovvictor
@draganovvictor Год назад
Kind of related, the use of tapioca pearls in Bubble Tea (Taiwanese in origin, now a fever all around the globe) is actually due to the portuguese, who learned the production of tapioca gum from cassava from indigenous people in Brazil and took it to Asia. There is a Brazilian desset - sagu - that is basically the same as the tapioca pearls in Bubble Tea.
@MarcosVinicius-zz8pv
@MarcosVinicius-zz8pv Год назад
the main island of Taiwan was also named by the Portuguese, "Formosa" meaning 'beautiful'. If I'm not mistaken, the country was also called the Republic of Formosa for a while.
@duck1ente
@duck1ente Год назад
Sago gulaman is a famous cheap thirst quencher in the Philippines, dont know if Portuguese influence
@joaolemes8757
@joaolemes8757 Год назад
​@@anavrosaI'd say it definitely has.
@SandraSilva-eu5dp
@SandraSilva-eu5dp Год назад
Os portugueses são como as formiguinhas, pequeninas, metem-se nas mais estreitas brechas e fazem carreiros longos e bem marcado. Obrigado por dar a relevância que de facto merece, a nossa gastronomia é mesmo diversa e muito saborosa.
@alexurrada
@alexurrada Год назад
concordo
@alyzesouza
@alyzesouza Год назад
Ou baratas
@alyzesouza
@alyzesouza Год назад
Roubamos tudo
@blaze3256
@blaze3256 Год назад
cadê meu ouro
@alexurrada
@alexurrada Год назад
@@blaze3256 se o quer pede á inglaterra, já tá a ficar chato isso, aanão vejo o mundo inteiro a pedir á inglaterra o ouro e artefactos que roubou
@meinmacau
@meinmacau Год назад
I'm Portuguese, living in 🇿🇼. The staple food here is sadza, a corn porridge. Corn was 1st brought into this region by the Portuguese centuries ago. Sadza often goes with a kind of kale cabbage called covo, which is just like the Portuguese couve.
@Alfablue227
@Alfablue227 11 месяцев назад
I just visited 🇿🇼 in June and thought my friend and I must have been the only two!! Shud hv known better! LOOOOVVVEEED Zimb and it's people. 🙏❤️🇵🇹🇵🇹🇿🇼
@Remin777
@Remin777 Год назад
It's not just food; some words we use (in our language) are derived from the Portuguese. For example, 1. soap: Saboo (sabão) 2. coffee: Cafae (café) 3. Know: Saab (sabe) 4. tea: Cha (chá) 5. who: krai/kai (Quem) ...and many more I am a Thai living in Portugal. And I loved your informative vdo Thank you for sharing.
@il_gran_signore
@il_gran_signore Год назад
"Coffee" comes from Arabic "qahwah". In most languages around the world, the name for coffee is something similar to qahwah because coffee was first brewed in Yemen, so not necessarily it's from portuguese influence.
@shadowsinmymind9
@shadowsinmymind9 Год назад
I hope you're enjoying our country
@oldwine2401
@oldwine2401 Год назад
@@il_gran_signore but was portuguese to introduce , like she said
@Carolus_Tsang
@Carolus_Tsang Год назад
​@@il_gran_signore And tea comes from Chinese. (茶)
@madalenacarvalho1857
@madalenacarvalho1857 Год назад
​@@il_gran_signore Arabs were in Portugal origin for almost 900 years before they set off to explore the world in the 15th century
@c3phs
@c3phs Год назад
Portuguese here, I must say I loved the video, it is very informative. There's way more dishes, but I only want to add that Nando's was invented by a Portuguese guy in South Africa. Moreover if you want to really try Portuguese-Thai mixed cuisine you can go to the Kudi Cheen community neighborhood in Bangkok. It is a place in Bangkok that the Ayutthayans gave to the Portuguese as a friendship gift for their alliance, Portugal and Thailand are allied for more than 5 centuries. And to finish, I didn't know about the East Asian slaves that were brought to Portugal, so thank you for teaching me that. Anyway great video and great channel, you just earned a subscriber.
@AmabossReally
@AmabossReally Год назад
Just wanted to add that the famous peri-peri sauce that Nando uses originates from Mozambique (from yours truly, a disgruntled mozambican that feels this part isn't talked about lol)
@c3phs
@c3phs Год назад
@@AmabossReally Yeah he lived there but wasn't it open in RSA?
@AmabossReally
@AmabossReally Год назад
@@c3phs Yes, it was open there. I was just mentioning that the main ingredient “peri-peri” sauce that Nando is known for is Mozambican :)
@c3phs
@c3phs Год назад
@@AmabossReally I didn't say otherwise. Anyway Comprimentos de Portugal, irmão.
@AmabossReally
@AmabossReally Год назад
@@c3phs Estamos juntos 🤝🏾
@ppotatoo
@ppotatoo Год назад
Being Portuguese and seing this video is just so happy that someone can realise how Portugal cuisine is really underated and people don't even ask where did the food come from. Thx for making this video :))
@ericktellez7632
@ericktellez7632 Год назад
That doesn’t make them look good thought? “Where did that food come from?” “It came after the Portuguese invaded, slaved and then colonized this territory then introduced their ingredients and practices to the natives”
@pedrosorio9
@pedrosorio9 11 месяцев назад
​@@ericktellez7632 Japan, Thailand, England, Hawaii were not invaded, slaved and colonized by the Portuguese.
@mafilomenas.veloso2232
@mafilomenas.veloso2232 10 месяцев назад
The famous sponge cake, a cake that is part of the list of typical Portuguese desserts, gave rise to the most popular Japanese cake in the country; tea, which is part of British daily life, was introduced into their habits by a Portuguese queen, D. Catarina. And yes, Portuguese cuisine has influence on the cuisine of many countries around the world, because they were the first Westerners to reach Asia by sea, South America, immense territories in Africa. The Portuguese brought back immense products unknown to Westerners from these trips and introduced them to Europe. By the way, colonization has many negative aspects, but there is also positive in this. The Portuguese always had a knack for mixing with native populations and both sides profited from it. They were the first in the world to abolish slavery and at this moment it is we don’t have a colono country unlike many others that still have others under their wings… Thanks for the video! 👏
@Shaun32887
@Shaun32887 Год назад
My family is Guyanese, a former British colony in South America. I was pretty shocked when I visited Portugal and realized that all the food was familiar to me! Particularly anything related to cod (sal'fish -> salted fish) was pretty similar, the bacalao balls were essentially the fish cakes my mom has made my whole life. The tomato stewed fish was very similar as well.
@husseltoo
@husseltoo Год назад
Pastéis de bacalhau and caldeirada are the names of those dishes in Portuguese.
@JoeyJersey
@JoeyJersey Год назад
@@bloedblarre Portugal had lost their all their nobility and there was no heir to the thrown. Spain married the princess. Spain has lost every single war against Portugal. It wasn’t annexed
@elk6783
@elk6783 Год назад
Eu sou portugues..parabens pelo exelente vedeo..continua assim..grande abraço
@antoniovarela4444
@antoniovarela4444 Год назад
@@bloedblarre Portugal wasnt annexed. Was a separate kingdom. It just happaned that the king of Spain and Portugal were the same person.
@imlearningtoo74
@imlearningtoo74 Год назад
Did deeper
@coffeemug3009
@coffeemug3009 Год назад
We need a part 2 of this. There are so many other Portuguese food from Malaysia and Singapore that we need to talk about.
@ruiyurra4996
@ruiyurra4996 Год назад
Such as?
@azhariarif
@azhariarif Год назад
In Malaysia, we have Portueguese/Indian enclave that have their own cuisine such devil curry in the video. Malaysian ourselves don't eat Portuguese food.
@abcddef2112
@abcddef2112 Год назад
Surprising Indonesian also isn't highlighted considering the history of the spice island.
@coffeemug3009
@coffeemug3009 Год назад
@@azhariarif we do, we just don't know the origin is Portugal. Fruits and veggie like tomato, pineapple and chilli are not native to Malaysia, it was brought over here by the Portuguese from South America. Without the Portuguese bringing in chillis here, we would not have our spicy sambal. Also, along with the Portuguese egg tarts, the popular pineapple tart cookies that Malaysians of all races love were introduced by the Portuguese too.
@dendaGulliLapoch
@dendaGulliLapoch Год назад
There being some more famous Indian food influenced by portugal
@dledee
@dledee Год назад
I'd just like to point out that those dishes are stuff that is still eaten in Portugal. We do foi thong/fios de ovos and feijoada and sweet rolls/brioches and peri peri chicken/frango de churrasco. I'd say that if those foods belong to the countries that eat them then they're shared across different cultures rather than being Portuguese /or/ from somewhere else and it's so wonderful to be able to talk to someone and realize you share food, which is such a huge part of people's identities.
@mygoawithmathewalmeida3357
@mygoawithmathewalmeida3357 2 месяца назад
I am Goan.....portuguese traveled from here...proud of my history and heritage
@jeanjacqueslundi3502
@jeanjacqueslundi3502 25 дней назад
Don't let your fellow Indian SJWs bring you down. I have indian (not Goan) friends myself and the conversation around former colonialism is getting toxic in the past decade or so. They forget all countries and boarders were built by war at one point or another. Take care :)
@joaomatias3871
@joaomatias3871 Год назад
Another quick thing, the english word "marmelade" is based from the portuguese word "marmelada". While the english is a jam made with orange and orange peels, it is based on the Portuguese original which is a jam made from quince. Keep up the good work G
@RicardoNecrofear
@RicardoNecrofear Год назад
It's probably worth it to state that the portuguese word for quince is 'marmelo', hence marmelada/marmelade.
@ZecaPinto1
@ZecaPinto1 Год назад
Já o marmelanço aí é que ficou só para nós. As crianças não precisam de saber🤣
@Nuno.A
@Nuno.A Год назад
E a nossa é doce.. a Inglesa nem por isso... não me voltam a enganar....
@monicarodrigues985
@monicarodrigues985 Год назад
​@@ZecaPinto1 E aqui está um verdadeiro tuga.
@Kamdrimar
@Kamdrimar Год назад
They still refer to it as "Portuguese sweet bread" in Hawaii.
@Mati-ol4bt
@Mati-ol4bt Год назад
Hey just wanted to let you know that there is a better example for the Portuguese influence in Hawaii. I am from Azores and one Hawaiian dessert actually has the same name as one of ours. It's called malassada which actually comes from the archipelago of Madeira, it spread over to Azores and later on to Hawaii. They all look different, of course, because every region has their own take on the recipe.😊
@pedroamaral4127
@pedroamaral4127 Год назад
Ukelele derived from cavaquinho, a Portuguese guitar
@entrecilios
@entrecilios Год назад
it derived from the Braguinha and from the Rajão, two Iinstruments originally from Madeira archipelago (Portugal). The amount of madeiran descendants in Hawai is huge. The landscape of both archipelagos is very similar which must have madeiran imigrants feel right at home.
@JadeDeCosta
@JadeDeCosta 11 месяцев назад
My grandma’s people come from Madeira & my grandpa’s from the Azores. My dad was born in Hawaii. Yeah, they moved from an island to another island in the late 1800’s. Assume at the time there were better financial prospects in Hawaii. We still have bacalhau in Hawaii too but it’s in markets to use at home more than on restaurant menus. It’s really rare that I have seen a bacalhau dish on a menu here. Too bad cause it’s good.
@doreenjacintho7812
@doreenjacintho7812 11 месяцев назад
Just the opposite here! Grandfather's side from Madeira & Grandmother's side from the Azores😊
@limabean7235
@limabean7235 8 месяцев назад
And also the Portuguese, sweet bread
@ArpDatePT
@ArpDatePT Год назад
1:20 - Actually the Portuguese did trade with Japan A LOT in the 16th century. The city of Nagasaki was a small fishing village and the Portuguese turned it into one of the biggest trading cities in Japan and eastern Asia. Great video, thanks for bringing attention to us Portuguese :b
@FSuixo
@FSuixo Год назад
I'm Portuguese and have been living abroad for years. I was never much into food growing up as a teen. But as an adult going out to restaurants became more common. That's who I started trying new stuff more and more often. Once in a Japanese restaurant I tried tempura on the advice of one of my friends. As soon as I saw it, I told my friends my mom used to cook this. That's where we learned it was Portuguese. My good old mom back at home was not one to cook international meals for her kids. Lol Another one of these stories - I went to London for the first time a few years back and there I tried the famous fish and chips. I had heard of it many times before but actually never tried nor care to look at what it was. To my surprise I learned it was BACALHAU
@acceleratum
@acceleratum Год назад
fish and chips isn't always bacalhau but its definitely the preferred one due to Portuguese influence.
@xmun2450
@xmun2450 Год назад
@@acceleratum you can only hope its not
@JSMS97
@JSMS97 Год назад
Ui, fish and chips é Bacalhau? Eu achava que era tipo pescada ou assim 😮
@Martsibruh
@Martsibruh Год назад
Esperem só para ver o que nós chamamos cá ao bacalhau cru ☺️
@lourencopyrrait1879
@lourencopyrrait1879 Год назад
@@JSMS97 eu também
@st1ka
@st1ka Год назад
As a Portuguese this was very interesting to hear. The only thing I'd add is that Vindaloo is based on a Portuguese dish called "Vinha de Alho", you can even see the similarity to word vindaloo. Also, Feijoada is also a Portuguese national dish and it has been around centuries before Portugal started its naval period. :)
@giladshahar
@giladshahar Год назад
It come from the north of Portugal = fejusda transmontana.... Tras montes portuguesa...
@Paulo37580
@Paulo37580 Год назад
Thanks for this piece of information about feijoada. A Brazilian here. Obrigado.
@kikoempis
@kikoempis Год назад
The Portuguese and the Brazilian feijoadas are very alike. The main differences are the beans. BR uses the black bean, and PT uses red or white beans. Then some meats may vary, but they are preatty much the same.
@riograndedosulball248
@riograndedosulball248 Год назад
​@@kikoempis and well, before the discovery of the Americas, it probably was made with fava or lentils, but was made nonetheless
@droneio
@droneio Год назад
Yes and Vindaloo is found only in Goa and surrounding regions. You probably won't find mention of Vindaloo in other parts of India. Surprisingly it's more popular in western countries as an Indian curry than say New Delhi, where a common person won't know what Vindaloo is.
@vicentegoncalves7834
@vicentegoncalves7834 Год назад
Finally the Portugal cuisine getting some VERY deserved attention!! Bora Portugal!
@ComfyestofBois
@ComfyestofBois Год назад
Recently I've learned about a famous Jamaican dish called "ackee and saltfish" that is essentially fried salted codfish with a Jamaican fruit. As a Portuguese dude I looked at the dish for a split second and realized "this is just Bacalhau à Brás without the olive on top!" so I assume (might be wrong) that it's another dish you can trace back to Portugal.
@Alfablue227
@Alfablue227 11 месяцев назад
Not many Portuguese in Jamaica so 🙏for being one and for commenting!
@Randomgyal3
@Randomgyal3 7 месяцев назад
I literally just made a comment on if anyone know why jamaican and portuguese are basically same national dish... anyone know has i dont think, correct me if am wrong but i never heard portuguese go to jamaica in history?
@ComfyestofBois
@ComfyestofBois 7 месяцев назад
@@Randomgyal3 I mean, we were EVERYWHERE from the late 1400s to the late 1500s so I'm 100% sure we were trading in Jamaica at some point during the sailing trade days!
@jeanjacqueslundi3502
@jeanjacqueslundi3502 6 месяцев назад
Really? It's one of my favourite national dishes......now I'm super curious to taste this Jamaican dish.
@bmfpinto
@bmfpinto Год назад
The thing about Portuguese cuisine is that it adapts. It both receives external influences and influences other cuisines. It was indeed the first fusion cuisine.
@Mordecrox
@Mordecrox Год назад
I wonder if there's a video on the difference between adaptation to incorporate what new cultures and ingredients bring in, and adaptation for sake of emulating what they had at home. One example is the calabresa sausage, a staple in Brazilian pizza in place of pepperoni, but it was made by Italian immigrants trying to do the closest thing to italian calabria sausage but using local resources, but they would import or make real calabria the first chance they get.
@davidesoutilha
@davidesoutilha Год назад
well....most probably not the first fusion cuisine if we think about bread ;)
@alexam6959
@alexam6959 Год назад
Just like Portuguese people 😁 we adapted to cultures very easily
@Dornana
@Dornana Год назад
And the brazilian cusine is an extreme example of that, it literally has componeats from all over europe, africa , asia and native american food
@Yanzdorloph
@Yanzdorloph Год назад
not really the first, the same thing happened with middel easterner in SEA and india centuries before Portugal came in
@asitwaghmare01
@asitwaghmare01 Год назад
I'm from the Indian state called Maharashtra where one of the most famous dishes is Pav-Bhaji which is a blend of Portuguese and native Indian (Marathi to be specific) cuisines. The pav is Portuguese bread (pão) and bhaji is a type of Indian curry made with mixed vegetables.
@jaquelinebastardo9211
@jaquelinebastardo9211 Год назад
I live in Mozambique and here we eat bread (portuguese bread) and badjias) 😂 Portuguese influence here is everywhere, even me, I descend from portuguese 😅
@retivens925
@retivens925 29 дней назад
In Goa is called Baji-puri.
@PatriciaXara
@PatriciaXara Год назад
Portugal has a very rich cuisine. The trades with other continents brought a lot of ingredients and condiments that were incorporated in Portuguese food. Some dishes can sound a bit scary for cultures that are not used to cook with almost every part of an animal or have so many different water species available. In Portugal, meals are a time to hang out with friends and family, so our food is more for our mouths than for our eyes. I love eating food from around the world and I love our Portuguese cuisine.
@marie3587
@marie3587 Год назад
Patrícia Xará só para deixar a listinha da diversidade da gastronomia portuguesea, Em 2013 A “Dieta Mediterrânica”, candidatura apresentada por Portugal, Chipre, Croácia, Grécia, Espanha, Itália e Marrocos., foi declarada a Património Cultural Imaterial da Humanidade pela UNESCO Além desse conceito de dieta que promove a diversidade da alimentação, nos produtos locais e da época, e evidencia nos hábitos alimentares, como o uso do azeite, o consumo abundante de cereais, legumes e frutas, sopa e a presença moderada de vinho tinto a acompanhar as refeições Além dessa representação, a gastronomia portuguesa é muito rica e de qualidade os portugueses cozinham todo o tipo de preparados: - sopas de legumas, soupa de peixe, caldos, purés, canjas, molhos, cozido de grão, feijão com arroz, feijão com couve, xarém, caldo verde - vegetais, legumes, saladas, tempura - entrada, enchidos, paio, salpicão, presunto, ovos, pregos, bifanas, farinheiras e alheiras, rojões, sarrabulho, francesinhas, - diversos tipos de pão de vários cereais - guisados, assados no forno, assados na brasa, grelhados, ensopados, recheados, estufados, gratinados, cozidos, fritos - vaca, porco, vitela, anho, o cabrito, borrego, coelho, frango, pato, galinha, peru, perdizes - cabrito assado, guisado e sarapatelm cozido à portuguesa, leitão assado, carne de porco à alentejana, - carne de porco com ameijoas, favas com chouriço, frango piripiri - caldeiradas, cataplanas, espetadas, feijoadas, tripas à moda do Porto, açordas, pastéis, sopas de peixe, ranchos, pataniscas - mariscos, berbigão, camarão, sapateira, amêijoas, santolas, percebes, conquilhas, lingueirão, ostras, mexilhão - peixe e bacalhau de todas as maneiras , bacalhau à brás, e à lagareiro, com natas, à Braga, etc. pasteis de bacalhau, filetes de peixe fritos, - carapaus alimados, sardinhas assadas, bife de atum, polvo à lagareiro, lulinhas e choquinhos, lulas cheias, ameijoas à bulhão pato, pargo, o robalo, salmão, dourada, - massas e arroz, massas de peixe, de lingueirão, arroz de tamboril, cabidela, - doces e pastelaria de todo o tipo, - doces de amêndoa, de laranja, de figo, de alfarroba, de chila, de mel, morgados, pudins, arroz doce, mousses, ovos moles, pastéis de nata, gelados, doces conventuais, fogaças, sonhos, filhós e sonhos, pão de ló, ovos moles, tortas, - frutas de todo o tipo - queijos - vinhos, cervejas, licores, aguardentes, ponchas, em grande número
@eunaosouovasco
@eunaosouovasco Год назад
The word tea is from Portuguese is “transporte de ervas aromáticas”, its transport of aromatic herbs, that’s was in the box we shipped to England
@Macanese
@Macanese 19 дней назад
The word tea is from Fujian, a Chinese dialect.
@eunaosouovasco
@eunaosouovasco 19 дней назад
@@Macanese my life is a lie then
@Macanese
@Macanese 19 дней назад
@@eunaosouovasco you can check Wikipedia. The Portuguese word chá is from Cantonese because it is spoken in Macau. How can it be tea=transporte de ervas aromáticas.
@eunaosouovasco
@eunaosouovasco 19 дней назад
@@Macanese Macau was ours (was Portuguese)
@eunaosouovasco
@eunaosouovasco 19 дней назад
@@Macanese I believe
@savvageorge
@savvageorge Год назад
I also have a theory that the Portuguese invented the modern orange. In Greek an orange is called a portokali due to the Portuguese being the first to bring them to Greek speaking areas. The orange is a hybrid between the Chinese mandarin and the Indian pomelo and the Portuguese were frequently travelling between these two countries so I actually think they might be the inventors of the modern orange or at the very least the first people to bring orange trees to Europe.
@useringeneral
@useringeneral Год назад
I think arabs, moors, are more likely to have introduced it in Iberia, but interesting what you say.
@useringeneral
@useringeneral Год назад
Just looked into it...we're both right. In the XVI century portuguese introduced sweet orange from India bringing it back to life in Europe. Before, there were orchards since roman times, mainly grown in north África. Reintroduced by moors later on(Iberia) and Magreb, brought from Pérsia. Efcharistos
@beatrizteixeira2546
@beatrizteixeira2546 Год назад
@@useringeneral Pois, porque a própria palavra em português, 'Laranja' é de origens árabes
@joaodomingues6826
@joaodomingues6826 Год назад
The orange is called "Al-Portucal" in arabic. Eating oranges prevent scurvy, which the Portuguese found very early. The Portuguese voyaged around the world, and scurvy was always a hazard. They planted orange trees wherever they went so they would have fresh oranges in each port of call., and introduced the tree and the fruit all around the world. These trees - and the fruit itself - became known as “portugal” in many languages, and Arabic is one of them. In Greek, the fruit is known as Πορτοκαλο, “portokalo”, and Turkish has also “portokal” for orange. In the Persian language, both the fruit and the country are called Porteghal (they have a slight difference in spelling but otherwise pronounced the same!) The native Persian word for a similar-looking but sour-tasting citrus fruit is "narendj" (which has the same root as the words orange, arancia, naranja, etc.) I can imagine how the sweet Chinese orange, first brought by Portuguese merchants into the Middle-East and Europe, was called "Narendj-e Porteghal" (Orange of Portugal) and then shortened to Porteghal. Same must have happened in the Arabic speaking countries. Basically, the fruit is named after the country (sources: www.quora.com/)
@anadd6195
@anadd6195 Год назад
😊🇵🇹
@suzipam1234
@suzipam1234 Год назад
Im living in portugal now and im shocked at how good the cuisine is and i was never aware
@dolabanerjee8825
@dolabanerjee8825 Год назад
In West bengal, India and Bangladesh Chana(Cottage Cheese) was introduced by the Portugese which lead to the making of famous Roshogolla. Antony Firingi, a Portugese explorer became an integral part of Bengal.
@edumat25
@edumat25 Год назад
Beautiful video. As a Portuguese descendent who was born in Brazil, this info prouded me. Thanks.
@realhawaii5o
@realhawaii5o Год назад
It's incredible to me that I'm a Portuguese native living in Estonia but when I go to the supermarket I can find Pastel de Nata every time. Portugal is still having this influence today 😅
@balduccirichard
@balduccirichard Год назад
Pastel de nata bem feito com cafézinho é a melhor sobremesa do mundo, como sempre que posso aqui no Brasil
@gadeaiglesiassordo716
@gadeaiglesiassordo716 Год назад
sadly you can't find them in spain, evenif we have a quite big colony here
@realhawaii5o
@realhawaii5o Год назад
@@gadeaiglesiassordo716 go to Mercadona 😅
@gadeaiglesiassordo716
@gadeaiglesiassordo716 Год назад
@@realhawaii5o i don't have Mercadona in my hometown
@dani4ever
@dani4ever Год назад
​@@gadeaiglesiassordo716 ask you local pastery to start making them ahah
@thetressesofnephthys
@thetressesofnephthys Год назад
As someone of Portuguese descent (my father is from the Azores), this isn’t a mystery to me. We like feeding people and won’t let anyone go hungry. Even if you’ve been eating all day, we’ll ask you if you want more.
@sarahc.silveira8593
@sarahc.silveira8593 Год назад
That sounds like my mae.
@felipechaves6100
@felipechaves6100 Год назад
You also like to enslave people while you’re at it, am I right?! Lol I know you didn’t mean it, but your comment make it seems like Portuguese did those out of the goodness of their hearts and kinda ignores the gigantic stains they, and other colonizers left in those countries.
@peyxx
@peyxx Год назад
memórias de adn que ficaram de tempos dificeis,enche a barriga enquanto podes não sabes o dia de amanhã
@JAG8691
@JAG8691 Год назад
True. I have had many experiences of being given food after I have just eaten and I cant say no because it would be rude and the food is delicious.
@matttravers153
@matttravers153 Год назад
Shoutout to all the Azorean diaspora lol. I grew up with a lot of these foods as well. It's so interesting to see them spread all across the world
@fernandopereira1520
@fernandopereira1520 6 месяцев назад
You could have mentioned pastéis de bacalhau, for example, which is a favorite dish in Reunion Island but originated in Portugal. Reunion Island was also discovered by the Portuguese long before the French took possession of the island. At a market in France, I met some Reunionese who were making Pastéis de Bacalhau, and they were shocked when I told them that this recipe came straight from Portugal! I'm sure you can find this recipe all over Asia too.
@indiruskisofficial3090
@indiruskisofficial3090 Год назад
Holy moly, this video was top notch, not only for the quality of the content itself but the edition was incredible!! the music totally on point...keep on going man you are going places!🙌😆
@JoseFerreira-vj3lq
@JoseFerreira-vj3lq Год назад
As a Portuguese, I am deeply impressed by your history and facts knowledge! 👏🏻👏🏻
@yrosan
@yrosan Год назад
I think the biggest thig about Portuguese food, is that it's more often than not fruits of hardship, made with very simple ingredients, and not much complicated processes. This allowed natives of the regions Portugal was in contact with or colonized to make them their own way, and appropriating them over time. My point is, if you change the process of baking baguettes or making a pizza, they're not the same product anymore. If you add another ingredient to a Feijoada, it still is feijoada. Portuguese cuisine allows for improvisation much more than other former colonial powers' cuisine, any I think that's what made this influence stay strong, but hidden in regional culture.
@patriciadistraida
@patriciadistraida Год назад
That is a very good point.. I always said that portuguese food is poor people's food in the sense that you adapt it with whatever is available.. This translates well to other cultures that add or subtract to it and make it their own.
@nacht98
@nacht98 Год назад
Portuguese food is simply the best food, the way we cook things from vegetables to sweets, always keeping their taste...is stunning!
@Aloha698
@Aloha698 Год назад
Amo comida e doces portugueses ❤ beijos do Brasil
@eloiseh1984
@eloiseh1984 4 месяца назад
This is so interesting! I knew almost all this receipes but I would never be able to guess it was from Portugal! Thank you so much for this incredible video! 🙏
@fernandomartins2035
@fernandomartins2035 Год назад
Vinha d’alhos: Vindaloo; Peixinhos da Horta: Tempura; fios d’ovos: foi thong etc
@EmotionsToBurn-mi8fv
@EmotionsToBurn-mi8fv Год назад
m.ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-VVISjoNAdG8.html
@marianaaguiar6497
@marianaaguiar6497 Год назад
hey there, great video! As a half Portuguese half Chinese person who was born and raised in Macau, I’d love to see your take on traditional Macanese cuisine, which I’d pretty much say is one of the pioneers of fusion dishes, where Portuguese and Chinese cultural cooking practices (along with many others like Indonesia and Malaysia) intersect very interestingly 😌
@ieatcrayons408
@ieatcrayons408 Год назад
I'm quite interested to knowa bit more about those dishes! Could you tell me the names of some? :)
@rafaelbernardes3582
@rafaelbernardes3582 Год назад
Heyyy, Portugal heree, I'm very happy for seeing outsiders speaking about my country, one happy thing to see. Keep up with the videos bro Greeting from Portugal🇵🇹❤
@Irisa0
@Irisa0 Год назад
As a proud Portuguese, I'd like to thank you for this video ^^ It is always fun to have people discover a little bit more about Portugal and how its people have subtly influenced the world. Yes, our location in Europe made us prime candidates to be the first to set our sights to the rest of the "unknown" world, but it was always our curiosity more than our ambition that drove us towards exploration. At least, that is how I always felt towards our history. I also believe that our influence is mostly unknown from the masses because of something the Portuguese always did and do to this day - we adapt VS impose. What I mean is, we have "our stuff" and we get to a new place and we use "local stuff" from the new place with "our stuff", that way it is both "ours" and "local", and it eventualy becomes "local" with "our" little and forgotten influence... That was pretty poorly phrased, but after seeing your video I believe you'll get what I mean ^^ Be well and continue on your Portuguese culinary exploration. You will not be disappointed as our food is awesome ;P
@TheEd0206
@TheEd0206 Год назад
Portuguese influence in Indonesian cuisine is mainly in fried snacks such as pastel (which is actually empanada), risoles, kroket and fried plantains. Also sponge cake here is called bolu kinda similar to Bolo in portuguese.
@giraffestreet
@giraffestreet Год назад
There is Empanada in Indonesia, called Panada from Manado
@brandontan5181
@brandontan5181 Год назад
Croquettes are from the Dutch... but the Dutch got it from the Portuguese, mostly from the expelled jews that settled in Netherlands :)
@TheEd0206
@TheEd0206 Год назад
@@brandontan5181 AH I see
@danielt.8573
@danielt.8573 Год назад
*Empada.
@MVSSENJU
@MVSSENJU Год назад
Those names are pretty much the same in portuguese! The word Pastel is also used for stuff like empanadas(or in pt empadas).Then we also say rissóis and croquetes.
@abelhaa1
@abelhaa1 Год назад
Glad you like it (: 🇵🇹❤️
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@carlosfrancisco6627 Год назад
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@StellaSteve-ik4sw Год назад
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@polaromonas
@polaromonas Год назад
There are so many Portuguese-inspired desserts in Thai cuisine. Granted they are quite similar to ‘Foi Tong’ (golden thread) in how they are made. But when you’re in Thailand, try ‘Tong Yib’ (golden cup-this is my translation so it could be wrong)‘Tong Yod’ (gold drops), ‘Kanom Kai’ (literal ‘egg snack’), and ‘Kanom Mo Gang’ (pot snack) they are all made with eggs which weren’t use in Thai desserts back in the day.
@zylot8792
@zylot8792 Год назад
I'd say Tong Yib could be translated as Golden pick (as in pick up the snack)
@nolanpeale6472
@nolanpeale6472 Год назад
Luk Chup is another dessert that that has come to Thailand from Portugal. Basically its marzipan that replaces the almond meal with mung beans, because, well, there weren't a lot of almonds growing in Thailand. I'm also a little suspicious that orange cake (Ton Kok? Kek Sôm?) wouldn't have its origins in Kudi Chin as well. At the very least, the Portuguese are credited in spreading sweet oranges around the world, so in part the oranges used to make orange cake may be sourced to Portuguese traders.
@brainwheeze6328
@brainwheeze6328 Год назад
A lot of Portuguese desserts are based around eggs. Too much so I'd say 😅
@lucasribeiro7534
@lucasribeiro7534 Год назад
Tong yod looks almost exactly like 'castanhas de ovos' (egg chestnuts) from my hometown, Aveiro (which is famous for another egg-based sweet called 'ovos moles').
@HumbleKeto
@HumbleKeto Год назад
As a Portuguese living in London I can’t say this enough to everyone I meet - Portuguese cuisine is Europe’s best. The variety between meat, fish, deserts, pastries, drinks… quality of products! The Portuguese just don’t have the long-standing marketing power of the French, Italian or Spanish, who really promote their stuff as the best, as they should. Personally, Portugal is the capital food of the World!
@GRosa
@GRosa Год назад
*food capital
@GRosa
@GRosa Год назад
*food capital
@yakitatefreak
@yakitatefreak Год назад
I would be happy to keep Portuguese Cuisine underrated to let people "discover" its true power.
@ericktellez7632
@ericktellez7632 Год назад
China better
@leito1257
@leito1257 26 дней назад
Absolutely agree with you.💝 We don’t know how to marketing our amazing products. Spain is using our olive oil and sale it like if is there’s. Our trees , our olive’s, our olive oil. Collected by Spanish company. And sold as Spanish virgin olive oil 🫣
@Susygans12
@Susygans12 6 дней назад
Portuguese here. I really appreciate this. There were some I had known about but some new too. There are several more examples, some of which have already been mentioned in the comments. Thank you for the video!
@andrevilhena4149
@andrevilhena4149 Год назад
Our cuisine is not underestimated, what happens is that a large majority of foreigners do not have that keen palate to know what is good!Our cuisine is appetizing, diverse, meat or fish dishes, seafood, salads, sweets, in short, a cuisine that we called grandmother's cuisine because only the grandmothers had that spice so appetizing that gives a unique flavor to the dishes of traditional Portuguese cuisine. What Gourmet food, what haute cusine ? None compare to our cuisine. But it is not only the cuisine that they do not know for stupidity, it is also the glorious History of Portugal, which in the XV and XVI centuries was a world power and shared with Spain the world divided into two parts. A small country with 1 million inhabitants and pioneered the knowledge of the seas, winds, and that there were other worlds beyond what was known. Anyway, Portugal is a VERY SPECIAL country. BELIEVE!Hugs and good luck!
@MrCaseHarts
@MrCaseHarts Год назад
As someone who is moving to Portugal and been to almost every nation on your list, its incredible. This video really touched me in my heart and reinforced my love of Portugal. (Yes I know the colonization and slavery were evil). The people are lovely, the country is beautiful. Thank you for making this video because Portugal is a country rarely celebrated today and in many ways deserves it. Muito obrigado por isso video. Isso realmente me fez feliz.
@dropelaves
@dropelaves Год назад
Bem-vindo a Portugal, MrCaseHarts!
@imagine_big9398
@imagine_big9398 Год назад
I hope your experience here is lovely :)
@SNZ2X
@SNZ2X Год назад
Welcome to Portugal! Much love from the Azores ❤️
@pulgadapraia
@pulgadapraia Год назад
Bem vindo!! ;)
@carlosb1878
@carlosb1878 Год назад
Welcome to Portugal. 😀
@miguelmartins2232
@miguelmartins2232 Год назад
I'm starting to get why people enjoy our cuisine so much when they come to Portugal. It could be because it's somewhat familiar to them. Although the dishes are not exactly the same, the flavors and textures are always there
@yu.czennie
@yu.czennie Год назад
proud to be portuguese, its great to see we had such big influence all around the world, its just sad that now we almost get no recognition
@debspringchannel831
@debspringchannel831 4 месяца назад
Ohhh man , I love your channel... I am Portuguese of Angolan origin ... and although at school we study the portuguese ocuppation all over the world, I have only come to this realization after living 20 years of living the UK!!! There is a lot of portuguese food that is of jewish origin such as : Bolas de berlin, canja de galinha which is jewish penicilim , allheiras de frango, folar, peixe frito etc etc...
@joaoguilherme9671
@joaoguilherme9671 Год назад
Portugal possui uma história incrível, um país minúsculo que mudou o rumo da história.
@laudemar-A.B.6386
@laudemar-A.B.6386 Год назад
Foi graças as tecnologias dos antigos navegadores portugueses que Castella e os outros impérios coloniais europeus conquistaram novas terras.
@vascocampelo2054
@vascocampelo2054 Год назад
Madlad
@Miguel-cg2vz
@Miguel-cg2vz Год назад
história incrível, mas só se conseguires ignorar a parte da escravatura
@Kurzweil-xk6fp
@Kurzweil-xk6fp Год назад
Nosso país após perder a predominância económico/cultural no mundo busca resquícios de sensatez e boa natureza na história para justificar nossos atos e resgatar um falso orgulho nacional. Na verdade o nosso país é podre, nós fomos os últimos dentre os países europeus a descolonizar, aquele tidos como heróis na nossa história como o Infante Dom Henrique tem suas imoralidades postas de lado, não andam a ensinar aos miúdos na escola que foi ele quem inventou o comércio de escravos transatlântico no mundo. Apesar desses e outros fatos e momentos que fomos vanguardas no mundo, nos encontramos hoje numa situação económica lastimável onde a maioria dos jovens portugueses - com razão - querem fugir de cá e procurar melhores oportunidades fora. Nosso país é uma vergonha, foi, é, e não mostra que deixará de ser.
@H7X
@H7X Год назад
​@@Miguel-cg2vz Isso também qualquer outro país fazia, nesse tempo era totalmente normal haver escravos e tals, era horrível.
@kignister
@kignister Год назад
As a Portuguese I say "Muito Obrigado. Excelente video!"
@Luport1
@Luport1 Год назад
I LOVE our Portuguese food and want to thank you for the light you're shining on it! I knew some of this but you taught me so much more about it and have given me even more pride in our culture. Obrigada!
@gilbertorodrigues3332
@gilbertorodrigues3332 Год назад
Feijoada it is, perhaps, a dish with some Roman influence that consisted in mixing diferentes kinds of meat in a way to not waste food. This dish gets completed, as we know it today, with the introduction of red beans in Portugal brought from america in the XV century. The feijoada gets the name and the original form in the north of Portugal (Trás-os-Montes) in medievel age. The name is Feijoada à transmontadana. That was a kind of food common between portuguese navigatores and colonos because it was a way to use leftovers, joining every small pieces of meat that day have and mixing it with beans. Today not only brasil eat feijoada as a national dish but also the african countries colonized by the portuguese, sometimes with diferent name and ingredients, like Cachupa in Cabo verde, or the fejoada from Angola, from Guiné Bissau and Moçambique.
@rosadoliveira856
@rosadoliveira856 Год назад
*Transmontana - Feijoada with meat parts and cabbages
@stevekane4922
@stevekane4922 Год назад
Pastéis da nata have recently been voted the world's favourite pastry. You literally find them everywhere. I saw a blog from a Chinese person returned to their small town in NE China. In the mall were both types, the "short" biscuit pastry ones popular in Hong Kong and the flaky pastry ones which are the original. Both are available in Portugal, the "short" ones degraded into the factory made "custard tart" universally eaten in the UK when I was a kid.
@SummerTriangle
@SummerTriangle Год назад
Man Pastéis de nata It's nothing! We made like... +1000 Cakes!
@stevekane4922
@stevekane4922 Год назад
@@SummerTriangle if you are talking about Portugal - I am a citizen and have lived here for over 30yrs. My son was one of the first people to make and sell them in the UK, thanks to a book we gave him on doces conventual.
@Bruxinhasorridente
@Bruxinhasorridente Год назад
In Goa, portuguese introduced also soups and a sweet called “Kulkuls” or “Kidyo”; "Bandel cheese" and the samosa (probably brought from Mozambique). In Macau there's "fat rice", "duck cabidela" and "cod chetnim". An amazing phenomenon resulted in a mix off all places portuguese have been since they shared what they brought from Europe to Africa; from Africa to Asia; from Asia to Europe and from all over to Brasil/America.
@joseluiscorreia396
@joseluiscorreia396 Год назад
I was wondering if "chamuça" (samoza) came from Portugal to India or the other way around.
@hayashihikari
@hayashihikari Год назад
Just a small, but important correction: the Portuguese also shared what they got from Brazil with all over the world, they didn't only bring things to Brazil. 😉 Our nature is too diverse and almost everything grows here (exactly the reason why we became a Portuguese colony). What they shared from Europe is mostly their culinary techniques, but most of the resources were brought from Brazil, Africa, Asia to Europe.
@catshinee2524
@catshinee2524 Год назад
We're a small country but we're a big country as well ❤🇵🇹
@_rodrigo_9104
@_rodrigo_9104 Год назад
As a Portuguese thank you for the video, I enjoyed
@etiqueta8839
@etiqueta8839 Год назад
In the Netherlands we have a specialty pastry of the region Zeeland called Zeeuwse Bolus. This pastry was supposedly brought to the Netherlands by Jewish diaspora from Portugal and Spain. They're very sticky and sweet, very tasty also.
@FranciscoSilva-pm9ot
@FranciscoSilva-pm9ot Год назад
Bolus-> reads as Portuguese word of cakes lol
@buecreepy
@buecreepy Год назад
In the 4-minute part, you're talking about "roupa velha," which means old clothes. On the evening of December 24th, literally everyone in Portugal eats boiled codfish with carrots, potatoes, chickpeas, Portuguese cabbage, and boiled eggs with olive oil, vinegar, and garlic (unless they're rebels eating turkey, but that's rare!). The next day, we have the Christmas lunch, but on that night, it's common to make a "refogado" (fried onions and garlic in olive oil) and add the leftovers from the Christmas Eve supper! I'm Portuguese, and I enjoyed the video! I'm going to subscribe!
@etcollector3560
@etcollector3560 Год назад
Tava à procura deste comentário!
@buecreepy
@buecreepy Год назад
@@etcollector3560 supostamente antigamente comia-se era ao almoço de dia 25! Mas acho que era quando havia menos money pra comer o que se tem acesso a comer hoje
@anacosta4590
@anacosta4590 Год назад
Absolutely. And it has to be a little bit brown on the bottom, slightly burned
@buecreepy
@buecreepy Год назад
@@anacosta4590 I think that that detail depends on the family, couve e bacalhau queimado/tostado amarga, eu pessoalmente não gosto. a maneira como se faz na minha família é mais só para refogar de leve e aquecer, deixando a mesma humidade na comida de quando é cozida em água
@beatrizteixeira2546
@beatrizteixeira2546 Год назад
É tão bom, a forma como a minha avó faz fica a saber a bacalhau à brás :p
@SmartieOfficial
@SmartieOfficial Год назад
Very good and well edited video amigo ❤
@therebelkitten
@therebelkitten Год назад
I knew that the Portuguese had a lot of influence around the world but thank you so much for this insightful video. Not only we spread cuisine but we also left our mark in some words originated by Portuguese in other languages, take for example Japan: botan (botão), koppu (copo), furasuku (frasco) and a few more. I hope you can try Portuguese food if you haven't yet, you will not regret! Thanks!
@Flymoki13
@Flymoki13 2 месяца назад
The Portuguese were more of a group of First Cultural ambassadors for Europe and for the Distant World... Portuguese in most cases were simply Merchants exporting the Culture was known everywhere else in Renaissance Europe or in the World far off from Europe. Exporting things never much intrinsically Portuguese in the First Place. Tea from China to England, Castella cake from Spain to Japan and so on... that's how unimportant Portuguese cuisine has come to be, because once Distant Countries started figuring out and coming into contact with the actual origins of Foods first introduced them through Portuguese navigators, Portugal held no more significance.... Think about it, Portugal was never a Country known for Its exquisite Arts within the context of European Culture, easily overshadowed by Italy, France, Spain, Low countries... still Portugal was able to make a name for itself supplying Europe with oriental Fine Goods and the other way around also True
@sankhaganguly
@sankhaganguly Год назад
One of the most famous Indian street foods of Mumbai is called Pav Bhaji, which is a Portuguese-influenced dish. The Pav is actually Portuguese 'Pao' which is a type of bread that is very similar to the Hawaiian sweet bread in shape and size. Also in Bengal, we use the term Pao-roti for packaged bread, which I think is introduced by the Portuguese who came from Goa.
@Duarte_martins
@Duarte_martins Год назад
That one is great, and you also have a few other Pavs.
@paulapereira6564
@paulapereira6564 Год назад
Parabéns pelo trabalho de investigação. Muito bem explicado.
@josemenezes9264
@josemenezes9264 Год назад
Great video. I've lived in some of the places mentioned in your video and always tried to bring the same point across. A lot of things can still be traced to first contact 500 years ago we established globally. Congratulations, really appreciated it.
@paulojorgedias4271
@paulojorgedias4271 День назад
Thank you Matthew Li, I am Portuguese and I feel proud of what you did 😊, the history of my country is far from being perfect, a lot of wars and conflict that could be avoided, but personally like to stick to the good things. In this video you touch a forgotten world for many people. Amazing video Matthew Li 👍😎.
@peyxx
@peyxx Год назад
Portugal its always underated at everything, but true heroes dont live from forced propaganda they just move on with simplicity as their ultimate reward
@cobano
@cobano Год назад
💯
@reginamemoriesforever-vc8ql
@reginamemoriesforever-vc8ql 26 дней назад
The Portuguese work for God Almighty and we reap the rewards He concedes. We don’t need the recognition or praise from the world, actually we prefer not to have it.
@Martsibruh
@Martsibruh Год назад
As an Azorean, I can confirm that sweetbread (Or "Massa" as we call it) is indeed very popular here, especially in Easter
@Duarte_martins
@Duarte_martins Год назад
Não é só pão de leite? Pensei que tivessem sido os Madeirenses a levar para lá por acaso, e não os Açoreanos.
@gordusmaximus4990
@gordusmaximus4990 Год назад
@@Duarte_martins as a Azorean also, nop. Massa is even part of Azorean identity, very popular, specially in "Espírito Santo" season.
@angelaclaudia3307
@angelaclaudia3307 Год назад
Em Braga chamamos de pão de leite mesmo
@inessilva6086
@inessilva6086 Год назад
isso é tipo o pão doce que se come aqui no norte, na altura da pascoa?
@gordusmaximus4990
@gordusmaximus4990 Год назад
@@inessilva6086 exato.
@MomentosDoceseSalgados
@MomentosDoceseSalgados Год назад
Wow, this video was truly eye-opening! It's amazing to see how Portuguese cuisine has made its way to so many different corners of the world. Portuguese cuisine's ability to seamlessly blend into different culinary identities is truly impressive. It's clear that Portuguese food has left a significant and underrated mark on the world, and we should definitely give it the recognition it deserves alongside other famous cuisines.
@jaimedelgado7529
@jaimedelgado7529 Год назад
Dude, I appreciate the amount of research you did on this. I find this stuff fascinating. Great vid dude. U earned my sub with your fine work on this one
@elcieguillopillo
@elcieguillopillo Год назад
Very nice video, I´m from Galicia, Spain at the north of Portugal and i love to see all the videos about portuguese history because its kinda our little brother than became bigger than us (talking about my region)
@HotDrive69
@HotDrive69 Год назад
Actually, we sat down in Tordesilhas at one time and divided the world in half. 😅
@gadeaiglesiassordo716
@gadeaiglesiassordo716 Год назад
@@HotDrive69 yeah. im from burgos but that would be the biggest claim a city can make.
@lfmsimoes1
@lfmsimoes1 Год назад
I think that, generally, we Portuguese also like the Galicians better than the "nuestros hermanos" from other parts os Spain... (the love is mutual)
@lordcommandernox9197
@lordcommandernox9197 Год назад
@@lfmsimoes1 No Luis, I love all my Iberians brothers equally, except for Castillians. I wouldn't actually mind a united States of Iberia if Castille relented control over the provinces they conquered by force and gave everybody the independence they demand. If Barcelona had as much Power as Lisbon and Madrid, If the Galicians and Basques we free, only then would I even consider any form of union. Until then I will look at Spain as an inferior political entity, with sparatists actions against it being perfectly justifiable. It's not the non Galicians the Portuguese dislike, it's just Madrid.
@caramil2007
@caramil2007 Год назад
Sempre senti que os galegos são mais portugueses que espanhóis. E a culinária galega... ❤
@elmariachidiaz1
@elmariachidiaz1 Год назад
Tailand Sweet Sticky Rice is also portuguese. The name Vindaloo comes from Vinha d'Alhos, a seasoning for pork made with A LOT of garlic, bay leaf and white whine (that can turn into vinegar in a long HOT trip). It rests for at least 12h like that until you fry it in lard. It's litreally the base of the a thousand Portuguese dishes. Don't forget that even today and unlike the vast majority of the subcontinent, Goans eat pork. Finally, be aware that the Red Hot Chilli Peppers (Princess Fingers), and man are they an institution of Indian cuisine, were also brought to India from Angola by the Portuguese. If you come to Portugal you'll find that our culinary richness also depends on what we brought from the East. Portugal alone eats 3 TIMES more rice than all Europe put together (including spannish Paella and Italian Risotto), all our desserts have cinnamon or gather eggs and coconut. We brought potatoes from South America, all the spices that are now of everyday usage but most important than that is that even before the travels we had our coriander, carrots, chickpeas, lemons and oranges brought by the Moors, that where in Portugal from 700AD to 1100AD. The most surprising? Earl Gray and that 5 o'Clock Tea all over the UK and the Commonwealth was introduced by the Princess Catarina de Bragança that married with King Charles II in 1662.
@wegotit2587
@wegotit2587 Год назад
^Sweet sticky rice (with any fresh fruit) is actually Lao. Like Portuguese food, Lao food is hidden everywhere (especially in Thailand and neighboring countries). Lao eat sticky rice more than any population in the world. It is the staple rice amongst Lao populations, no matter what nation state citizenship they have.
@Muay-MMA
@Muay-MMA 10 месяцев назад
Hahah so is it Portugal or Laos? Everyone is claiming Thai stuff because its too good xD
@reginamemoriesforever-vc8ql
@reginamemoriesforever-vc8ql Месяц назад
Tea was the acronym stamped on the big cargo boxes that transported the tea leaves. TEA transporte ervas aromáticas
@frankrivera4625
@frankrivera4625 13 дней назад
From Puerto Rico Portuguese influence does exist in many dishes here. Example bacalaito. It made with bacalao. A salted dried cod fish. We also eat certain root food with bacalao.
@midshipman8654
@midshipman8654 Месяц назад
portugal has a very interesting colonial history because they tended to set up trading posts or “factories” instead of straight up large scale land conquests. They would often control the land directly around their merchantile interests though, which seems to seperate them from their immediate naval trading predicessors in Italy like Venice or Genoa who often set up in foreign ruled cities and towns, but often from fortified guild buildings. This strategy I think in part acounts for how such a relitively small nation had such wide scale influence and interests. Instead of focusing all their attention and power on one or two places, they tended to spread out across different areas.
@manuelaanapaz3936
@manuelaanapaz3936 Год назад
Sou portuguesa e não sabia muitas coisas que disse obrigada por falar da nossa cozinha
@rafaelabreu2873
@rafaelabreu2873 Год назад
I think it was Anthony Bourdain who said "Portuguese empire was the empire of food". I also remember a Scottish professor I had, that said to me that Portugal never was too strong in its marketing, specially with concerns to Portuguese cuisine and wine (it's been paving that road). It's time to have a museum dedicated to Portuguese influenced food around the world and other museum dedicated to the age of discoveries. Thank you for being part of the word/knowledge spread.
@soniacarvalho1950
@soniacarvalho1950 Год назад
In the history of England, the famous cake is the VICTORIAN CAKE, which is a version of the Portuguese PAO DE LO, it was presented to the Queen or a Portuguese governess and until today it is part of the hill of any coffee shop in England
@Carol3ars
@Carol3ars Год назад
Tea is actually a portuguese acronym meaning Transporte de Ervas Aromaticas (Transport of Aromatic Herbs). Since the portuguse were the ones trasporting it to britain in the first place and introduced it. The custom came a lot out of the need for Portuguese nobility to have an activity to blend in and learn how to mingle, thus tea time was born. (Also whoever didnt show up to tea time meant was the woman that was sleeping with her husband kinda deal) Wonderful video! Im portuguese and didn't know that some of these dishes originated from us, though once you pointed it out I recognized the similarities immediatly
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