One Way Ticket

(Well keep going east till we’re home)

Mystery Meals of Porto

We eat lunch and snacks at local pubs, coffee shops, and small mom and pop places. We cook our main meals when needed in our apartment. Tasting the local food is very much a part of the whole cultural experience. Sometimes we are surprised when the food arrives as it is not what we thought we had ordered or even purchased at the local grocery market. 

This is a flaming chorizo sausage eaten at a local pub. The fully cooked sausage is reheated with burning alcohol in a special created clay dish. The local beer in the Azores and Portugal mainland is Super Bock.

We thought we had ordered pork noodles and sautéed onions. We received smoked pork shavings, olives, and bread. 

Louise thought she had bought a frozen package of shrimp to cook with rice. The package was mostly encased in frost. She did not read the label “tentacles, etc.”The surprise almost over shadowed the smell when she pulled off the thawed plastic packing lid. 

The first stop on our tour of the Douro River Vallley yesterday, which began with a 7:30 AM bus boarding, was in a town famous for itsspecialty pastries. In Amarante, they are famous for Doces Falicos. During the Estado Novo regime the pastries were outlawed as being too risqué. They became a symbol of defiance to the fascist dictator. Previously the tasty pastries were offered by men to women as an indirect way to request intimacy, so the story goes.

9 responses to “Mystery Meals of Porto”

  1. So, did you eat the tentacles?

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    1. no way. I am adventurous, but I need to draw the line somewhere

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  2. Definitely an adventure. Wondering if those tentacles were cooked up or found their way to a garbage???

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    1. we put them in the garbage. We really did cook shrimp this afternoon.

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  3. colorfulsoftly6006Bonnie Avatar
    colorfulsoftly6006Bonnie

    what fun! I’m not certain i could have eaten tentacles either! The pork shavings with bread sound like a nice surprise though.

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  4. oh, Louise! The look on your face was priceless! Was it Octopus or Squid. I’ve tried both but just chunks, not the tentacles. It was very rubbery. What interesting places you’re seeing! I assume that’s a cork tree? I’m going to have to look up how to make cork. Thanks so much for sharing with us!
    Peggy

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  5. thank you for continuing to share.

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  6. Hello Louise and Chuck, Harper here. Did you see the Netflix movie My Octopus Teacher? You’ll never eat octopus again! I had the same experience with culturally unknown food when I was in Bonaire, a Dutch protectorate off of Venezula. Suffice it to say that the Dutch language is nothing like English, except when it is! I am loving your blog–stay healthy, and don’t eat the rubbery meat!

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