Brazil - Volume 1
Brazil is wonderful. Warm, slightly humid weather. Amazing food. Excellent drinks. Picturesque, in that beautiful scenery sense that is only possible on a beach.
The trip started a bit bumpy - I arrived, despite a cancelled flight, my luggage did not. Note to all traveling in the third-world: unless you go to the airport to collect your bag, no one cares whether your bag has been delivered. Alas, all is well, United will be paying for a few new sexy dresses and most importantly, my bathing suit, clean underwear and the tequila and triple sec arrived intact.
A few highlights thus far:
Moqueca: A traditional Bahian dish, with a base of coconut milk, a few veggies and fish and seafood, cooked with dende oil, the African/Bahian equivalent of our olive oil, but from palm, not olives. The dish is served with rice, a pasty, slightly starchy side and manioc, a flour that serves to bind the flavors together. Much like ceviche a year ago in Panama, I've made it my mission to taste moqueca at various locales throughout my stay.
Aracaje: The ultimate street food, aracaje is fritter fried in dende oil, slice open, stuffed with hot sauce, a few sides (including that same starchy side served with moqueca) and baby briney shrimp, and then eaten like a sandwich. Sooo tasty and good.
Meat. The churasco is impressive and abundant. Boi Preto is the best in Salvador. The huge salad bar, which is a salad bar in name only, features everything from sushi to cooked dishes to cheese to almost anything else. Several waiters are constantly in circulation, each ready to carve a different cut of beef, chicken, pork or fish for you instantly. The meat is amazing; the very nature of grass fed and no hormones means that the meat tastes as it should really taste, rich and succulent and delicious.
Capirinhas: I've been drinking this sugar cane alcohol, cacacia, at almost every opportunity. In its pure form, it's undrinkable. Mixed with fresh limes and sugar into a capirinha, it is amazing, refreshing, tangy and a bit potent. Bruno, my favorite beach bartender/caretaker, makes the best in the city.
More as the trip goes on.