Beatriz Costa
Beatriz Costa is one of inspirecipe's regional editorial personas (São Paulo) — not a real person. inspirecipe recipes and photos are created with AI assistance: structured, with metric and US measurements, full step-by-step instructions, and no fabricated ratings.
Recipes by Beatriz
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Pão de queijo — pan de queso brasileño
Bouncy, chewy, gluten-free cheese rolls with a crackly shell and a stretchy, cheesy centre. Made from tapioca starch — no wheat, no kneading, ready in half an hour.
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Feijoada — guiso brasileño de frijoles negros y cerdo
Brazil's national dish: black beans slow-cooked with an array of smoked and salted pork until thick and glossy, served with rice, sautéed collards, orange, and toasted farofa. A weekend feast that feeds a crowd.
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Moqueca — guiso brasileño de pescado
Brazil's sunshine in a pot: chunks of white fish gently stewed with coconut milk, tomatoes, peppers, onion and coriander, enriched with golden dendê (palm oil) in the Bahian style. Bright, creamy and fragrant with lime — cooked in one pan and ladled over rice with a side of pirão. No browning, no fuss.
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Brigadeiro — trufas brasileñas de chocolate
Brazil's essential party sweet: a simple fudge of condensed milk, cocoa and butter cooked until thick, cooled, rolled into balls and coated in chocolate sprinkles. No birthday (festa) is complete without them. Three ingredients, endlessly loved — soft, chewy, deeply chocolatey little bites.
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Coxinha — croquetas brasileñas de pollo
Brazil's №1 street snack: a teardrop-shaped croquette of soft dough wrapped around shredded, seasoned chicken (often with creamy catupiry), breaded and deep-fried until golden and crunchy. Shaped to look like a little chicken drumstick — 'coxinha' means 'little thigh' — they're the must-have at every Brazilian party, bakery and boteco.
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Pudim — flan brasileño de leche condensada
Brazil's national dessert: a silky baked custard of blended condensed milk, regular milk and eggs, set over a dark caramel that becomes a glossy sauce when you turn it out. Famously made with a hole in the middle (baked in a ring mould), it's denser and more luscious than a French crème caramel — three ingredients, and the showstopper of every Brazilian family lunch.
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Acarajé — buñuelos de frijol carita de Bahía
The soul of Bahian street food, with roots across the Atlantic in West Africa: fritters of ground black-eyed peas and onion, deep-fried in dendê (red palm oil) until crisp and golden, then split open and stuffed with vatapá, caruru, dried shrimp and a fiery pepper sauce. Sold by the baianas in their white lace on the streets of Salvador, acarajé is sacred to Candomblé and beloved as a snack — crunchy, spicy, and deeply Afro-Brazilian.
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Vatapá — crema bahiana de camarón, pan y coco
A rich, velvety icon of Afro-Brazilian Bahian cuisine: a thick, savoury purée of bread soaked and blended with coconut milk, dried and fresh shrimp, ground peanuts and cashews, and dendê (red palm oil), seasoned with ginger and herbs. Vatapá is luxurious and creamy with a gentle warmth, served as a dish in its own right with rice, or — most famously — as the filling for acarajé and abará. Its African and Indigenous roots make it one of the soul dishes of Salvador.
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Limonada brasileña
Brazilian lemonade is a misnamed classic: it's really a creamy limeade made by blending whole limes—peel and all—with cold water, sugar, and a swirl of sweetened condensed milk. The result is pale, frothy, and bracingly tart with a rich, almost milkshake-smooth finish. The trick is a quick pulse and a fast strain, which pulls fragrant oil from the peel without letting the bitter white pith take over.
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