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.
South Africa
SEASONINGS
Though the diversity is huge, South African food leans toward a few directions: bold spice, sweet-savory combinations, tangy sauces, smoke from the braai, and some gentle sourness from fermentation. Many recipes focus on spices; herbs are very subtle.
The constant use of sweet-savory is one of the strongest flavour combinations. Raisins, apricot jam, and dried fruits are added to savory dishes for contrast, like in, for example, bobotie. Cape Malay foods also uses this sweet-savory principle, but also add aromatic complexity and warmth on top. The cuisine prioritizes fragrance and layered spice notes over aggressive spiciness. The essential spice palette includes coriander, curry powder, cumin, turmeric, cinnamon, allspice, nutmeg, cloves and paprika.
If you look at braai marinades and Cape recipes, vinegar and other acids show up over and over. That gives a typical South African plate a sweet-tangy edge.
Compared with many Western European cuisines, there is more sweet + spicy + tangy in the same dish. Compared with very minimalist seafood or vegetable traditions, there is more emphasis on layering and transforming flavours through spice blends, chutneys, smoking, and long cooking.
Many parts of South African cuisine do lean toward spiciness, but not uniformly. For many urban dishes, township foods, or Indian-influenced meals, “spicy” is definitely part of the flavour profile.
CAPE MALAY CURRY POWDER — a traditional blend of cinnamon, cardamom, cumin, coriander, turmeric, and sometimes fennel and fenugreek is used in stews and curries.
RAJAH CURRY POWDER – South Africa’s crown jewel spice blend. Launched by Robertsons in 1938, it has become a household name and market leader in authentic South African curry flavours.
SIX GUN – a bold South African spice blend of salt, paprika, onion, celery, cumin, and cayenne. It is designed to enhance grilled meats, stews and mince. It is a trusted braai companion, bringing smoky, robust flavour with the punch of a six-shooter revolver.
SAUCES
PERI PERI sauce originated from the African Bird’s Eye chili, which is native to Africa, and was then popularized by Portuguese settlers who brought it from Africa to Portugal. Portuguese explorers encountered the spicy chili in Africa, brought it back to Portugal, and blended it with other ingredients to create the sauce now popular worldwide. It’s common in grilled chicken, seafood, livers, and meats at braais.
CHAKALAKA RELISH – a spicy, vegetable-and-bean relish which works as a condiment or a side dish. It features onions, garlic, ginger, bell peppers, carrots, sometimes cabbage, tomatoes, and often baked beans, all simmered with curry powder, paprika, and chili.
MONKEY GLAND SAUCE – a thick, dark sauce balancing sweet, sour, and savoury flavours. Base of chopped onion, garlic, fruit chutney and tomato sauce, with added vinegar, Worcestershire sauce, sugar, black pepper, chili. Used with steaks, burgers, as a dip for onion rings, fries, roast potatoes. Despite its name, the sauce contains no monkey meat or glands!
MRS BALLS CHUTNEY (BLATJANG) – made from dried fruit, often apricots and chillies, cooked with vinegar, sugar, cinnamon, cloves, ginger, and coriander. This Malay-inspired condiment is a staple at braais and pairs with bobotie.