Francesinha — Porto's Loaded Sauce Sandwich
Porto's gloriously excessive sandwich: layers of bread, ham, fresh sausage, smoked sausage and steak, wrapped entirely in melted cheese and drowned in a hot, spiced tomato-and-beer sauce — usually with a fried egg on top and a pile of fries to dunk. Invented in 1950s Porto as a hearty riff on the croque monsieur, it's a knife-and-fork institution of northern Portugal.
Make the molho: soften onion and garlic, add tomato, a bay leaf, piri-piri/chilli, a splash of port and white wine, beer and beef stock, then simmer and blend into a smooth, spicy, glossy sauce. Cook and layer steak, ham, fresh and smoked sausage between slices of bread, blanket the whole thing in slices of cheese, and grill/bake until the cheese melts and bubbles. Sit it in a deep plate, pour the hot sauce over, top with a fried egg and serve with fries.
- The sauce (molho) is the soul — a spiced tomato-beer-and-stock sauce, simmered and blended smooth.
- Wrap the whole sandwich in cheese and melt it until bubbling before saucing.
- Serve it swimming in the hot sauce, with a fried egg and fries to soak it up — eat with a knife and fork.
Equipment
- Saucepan
- Frying pan
- Oven or grill
- Deep plates
सामग्री
Sauce (molho)
- 1 onion, 2 garlic cloves, chopped
- 400 g chopped tomatoes
- 330 ml lager beer
- 250 ml beef stock
- Splash of port and white wine; 1 bay leaf, piri-piri/chilli, paprika
- 1 tbsp tomato paste; salt
Sandwich
- 4 slices thick white bread
- 1 small steak, sliced; 2 slices ham
- 1 fresh sausage (linguiça/chipolata) and 1 smoked sausage, cooked
- 200 g cheese (mild melting), sliced
- 2 eggs (to fry); fries, to serve
विधि
- स्टेप01
Soften the onion and garlic, stir in the tomato paste and chopped tomatoes, then add the port, wine, beer, stock, bay, paprika and piri-piri. Simmer 20 minutes, then remove the bay and blend smooth. Season — it should be spicy, savoury and glossy.
- स्टेप02
Pan-fry the steak and the sausages until cooked and browned; warm the ham. Slice the sausages.
- स्टेप03
Layer steak, ham and the sliced sausages between slices of bread to make two stacked sandwiches in an ovenproof dish.
- स्टेप04
Drape the whole sandwiches completely in slices of cheese and grill or bake until the cheese is melted, bubbling and starting to colour.
- स्टेप05
Sit each in a deep plate, pour the hot sauce generously over and around, top with a fried egg, and serve with fries tucked alongside to soak up the sauce.
Make ahead
Make the sauce ahead (it keeps and freezes, and the flavour deepens). Cook the meats and assemble, cheese-melt and sauce to serve. The sauce is the only real make-ahead component.
Storage
Best assembled and eaten hot. The sauce keeps 4 days refrigerated and freezes well — it's worth making a batch. Cook the fillings and assemble fresh; a reheated francesinha loses its melty, crisp contrast.
Variations
Francesinha à moda do Porto
The full Porto version with all the meats and a fried egg — the canonical one.
Vegetarian
Layer with grilled vegetables or a plant sausage and use a meat-free sauce (stock swapped for vegetable).
Spicier
Add more piri-piri to the sauce for the fiery version many Porto spots serve.
Serve with
Nutrition per serving
Nutrition values are estimates based on the metric measurements. Adjust as needed.
अक्सर पूछे जाने वाले
What is a francesinha?
A francesinha ('little French girl') is a Porto speciality: a layered sandwich of bread, ham, sausages and steak, completely wrapped in melted cheese and drenched in a hot, spiced tomato-and-beer sauce, usually topped with a fried egg and served with fries. It was created in 1950s Porto as a richer take on the French croque monsieur.
What's in the sauce?
The molho is the heart of the dish — a smooth, spicy sauce built on tomato, beer, beef stock and often a splash of port or wine, seasoned with bay, paprika and piri-piri. Recipes are closely guarded and vary by restaurant; it's simmered and blended until glossy and poured hot over the sandwich.
What cheese should I use?
A mild, good-melting cheese is used to blanket the whole sandwich — in Portugal a cheese like queijo flamengo (similar to a mild Edam/Gouda). Any mild melting cheese works; the point is a thick, bubbling cheese layer that the hot sauce pours over.
Do you eat it with your hands?
No — a francesinha is very much a knife-and-fork affair. It's drowning in sauce and topped with a runny egg, so it's eaten from a deep plate, with the fries used to mop up the sauce. It's hearty enough to be a full meal on its own.
Can I make the sauce ahead?
Yes, and it's recommended — the sauce keeps several days refrigerated and freezes well, and its flavour deepens. Make a batch, then assembling a francesinha is just cooking the meats, melting the cheese and pouring the reheated sauce over.
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