Portugal
SEASONINGS
Portuguese seasoning traditions share many herbs with their Mediterranean neighbors. Portugal stands out in Southern Europe for its extensive use of cilantro, using it in countless traditional dishes. Parsley also dominates the herbal profile, cinnamon, vanilla, and nutmeg enhance pastries, while pepper, bay leaves, cumin, and paprika add distinctiveness to savory dishes. Onions, garlic, and tomatoes form the aromatic base, complemented by olive oil, butter, and grape-based wine vinegar.
SAUCES
While Portuguese cuisine is not known for being spice-hot, it has a unique fiery signature sauce unmatched in southern Mediterranean cooking: PIRI-PIRI (or PERI-PERI). The key ingredient, the spicy chillied travelled a long way to settle in southern Portuguese cuisine. The original chilli comes from the Americas, but it was not immediately adopted by the Portuguese. They carried chilli plants to their African colonies, mainly Mozambique and Angola, where the plants thrived and the African bird’s-eye variety developed. Portuguese settlers and local African cooks began mixing these chillies with garlic, lemon, oil and salt. The sauce later made its way back to Portugal and became part of Portuguese cuisine. The sauce is paired with flame-grilled chicken (frango piri-piri), seafood, rice, and vegetable dishes.
MOLHO VERDE – A green sauce with olive oil, garlic, parsley, and vinegar or lemon juice, commonly served with grilled fish.
VINHA D’ALHOS – A marinade-like sauce of wine vinegar, garlic, bay leaves, and paprika used for pork and other meats.
ALHADA – A garlic-olive oil emulsion sometimes enhanced with cilantro, used particularly with shellfish dishes like amêijoas à Bulhão Pato.
MOLHO DE VILÃO – a traditional sauce from the Azores, made of garlic, onions, olive oil, paprika, vinegar, and sometimes white wine. A tangy sauce paired with grilled meats, particularly pork, gives a rich, smoky flavor.
REFOGADO – Not strictly a sauce but a flavor base of sautéed onions, garlic, bay leaf, olive oil, and sometimes tomatoes that starts many Portuguese dishes.
Brazil
SEASONINGS
The Brazilian approach toward flavoring is gentle, layered, and ingredient-driven. Brazilians rely on freshness and repetition: garlic, cilantro, parsley, scallions, dendê oil, coconut milk, and sometimes a touch of chili. One of the biggest misconceptions about Brazilian food is the spiciness – food is usualy not spicy. Where heat does come in is mostly regional. In Bahia, Afro-Brazilian cuisine uses pimenta malagueta, but even there, the heat is balanced.
Brazilian food never developed the vast spicing visible in some neighboring Latin American cuisines. Portuguese traders brought cinnamon, cloves, nutmeg, and black pepper, but still these are not used extensively; Portugal’s restrained style repeats.
In the Northeast, Afro-Brazilian cuisine highlights dendê oil, malagueta chili, and cumin, often balanced with coconut milk and lime. In the Southeast, garlic and parsley dominate, with cumin used more selectively in beans and stews. In the Amazon, cooks rely on annatto for color, tucupi (fermented cassava juice) for depth, and jambu, a tingling herb, for its unique sensation.
Jambu is one of those ingredients that instantly says Amazon. It’s a leafy green that gives your mouth a little tingle and numbness – almost like a mild electric buzz. It’s not common across all of Brazil, but in the North it’s iconic.
Brazilian cuisine doesn’t rely on premade spice mixes. Still, some seasoning bases are so common:
TEMPERO BAIANO – The closest to a true ‘spice mix’, made of cumin, coriander, dried chili, black pepper, turmeric, dried oregano, bay leaf, and sometimes nutmeg. Used in stews, beans, and poultry.
CHEIRO VERDE is Brazil’s fresh herb mix, consisting of parsley and green onions. Sometimes cilantro replaces or joins parsley. This fresh mix is added at the end of cooking or as a garnish.
SAUCES
REFOGADO, similar to Spanish sofrito or French mirepoix – not exactly the sauce, but a flavor base of onions, garlic, and sometimes peppers sautéed in oil. A start to many Brazilian dishes.
CHIMICHURRI BRASILEIRO – Inspired by Argentina, but with more cilantro. Made of parsley, cilantro, garlic, chili, vinegar, oil, and paired with grilled meats.