Everyday Arroz com Feijão
The founding couple of Brazilian cuisine: pearly, grainy white rice, and black beans simmered into a creamy broth. Simple, nourishing, present at nearly every lunch in the country.
The founding couple of Brazilian cuisine: pearly, grainy white rice, and black beans simmered into a creamy broth. Simple, nourishing, present at nearly every lunch in the country.
Listen, my bem, we can talk about grand banquets, but the truth of a Brazilian home is arroz com feijão, every day, without fail. My rice, I always sweated it in a little garlic before the water, so each grain stays separate, you see? And the feijão, you mash a ladleful to thicken the broth — it's that caldinho that makes you weep with happiness. Nothing more humble, querido, and yet it's what kept me going all my life.
- •White rice — two cups (staple cereal)
- •Black beans — one bowl, soaked (staple legume)
- •Garlic and onion — to taste (aromatics for refogado)
- •Lard or oil — one spoonful (fat)
- •Bay leaf, salt — to taste (seasoning)
Everyday Arroz com Feijão
The founding couple of Brazilian cuisine: pearly, grainy white rice, and black beans simmered into a creamy broth. Simple, nourishing, present at nearly every lunch in the country.
Why this dish? This was the heart of Hebe's eating habits: white rice and black beans, the immutable base of every Brazilian lunch, around which her daily cooking was organized.
Listen, my bem, we can talk about grand banquets, but the truth of a Brazilian home is arroz com feijão, every day, without fail. My rice, I always sweated it in a little garlic before the water, so each grain stays separate, you see? And the feijão, you mash a ladleful to thicken the broth — it's that caldinho that makes you weep with happiness. Nothing more humble, querido, and yet it's what kept me going all my life.
Ingredients (period version)
- White rice — two cups (staple cereal)
- Black beans — one bowl, soaked (staple legume)
- Garlic and onion — to taste (aromatics for refogado)
- Lard or oil — one spoonful (fat)
- Bay leaf, salt — to taste (seasoning)
Ingredients
- Long-grain white rice — 300 g (staple cereal)
- Dried black beans — 250 g, soaked 8 h (staple legume)
- Garlic — 3 cloves (flavor for rice and beans)
- Onion — 1 small (base for refogado)
- Neutral oil — 2 tbsp (fat)
- Bay leaf and salt — 1 leaf, salt to taste (seasoning)
Method
- Cook the soaked beans in plenty of water with bay leaf for 1 to 1.5 hours until tender.
- Sauté a little garlic and onion, mash in a ladle of beans, pour back to thicken the broth, season with salt.
- For the rice: sweat garlic (and a little onion) in oil, add rice and coat, then pour in 1.5 times its volume of salted boiling water.
- Cover and cook on low heat for 12-15 minutes without stirring, until absorbed; let rest then fluff with a fork.
- Serve rice and beans side by side on the plate, with the broth lightly coating the rice.
How it was made : In Brazilian homes, rice and beans were cooked separately every day, often in lard, and leftover beans improved the next day. This duo provides a recognized nutritional balance (cereal + legume) that has nourished all social classes.
The contemporary twist : Add a crispy farofa on top and a Portuguese-style fried egg to turn this foundation into a complete and indulgent plate.
Hebe Camargo · Charactorium