6 Foods in Belo Horizonte - Best Authentic Restaurants - TasteAtlas
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What to eat in Belo Horizonte? Where to eat in Belo Horizonte? 6 Traditional Foods You Have To Try in Belo Horizonte

The best traditional dishes in Belo Horizonte and the best authentic restaurants that make them, recommended by industry professionals.
Last update: Sat May 18 2024
6 Traditional Foods You Have To Try in Belo Horizonte
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01

Stew

BRAZIL
3.7
Mocotó
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Mocotó is a popular Brazilian stew made from cow's feet, beans, and various vegetables. The name of the dish stems from the Kimbundu word mbokotó. Nutritious and inexpensive, the stew was originally made by slaves who used cuts of meat that were thrown away by the landowners.


Mocotó is especially popular in the southern and northeastern parts of Brazil. Although Brazil's main weather-related problem is how to cool off, mocotó is a perfect winter stew that warms one up, since it is a part of Portuguese culinary heritage, and the mountainous parts of Portugal can be notoriously cold. 

MOST ICONIC Mocotó

1
Nonô - O rei do caldo de mocotó
02

Bread Roll

MINAS GERAIS, Brazil
4.5
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Literally translated to cheese bread, pão de queijo has its origins in the culinary inventions of African slaves, when they started to use the residue of the cassava plant. A fine white powder, or starch, was rolled into balls and baked.


At the time, no cheese was added, so it was just baked starch, but at the end of the 19th century, when slavery ended, other foods started to become available to the Afro-Brazilians for the first time. In the state of Minas Gerais, the dairy center of Brazil, cheese and milk started to be added to the starchy balls, and pão de queijo was created. 

MOST ICONIC Pão de queijo

1
A Pão de Queijaria
03

Barbecue

RIO GRANDE DO SUL, Brazil
4.6
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Churrasco is a Brazilian barbecue method where juicy pieces, slices, steaks, and chops of beef, veal, lamb, pork, and chicken are placed on big skewers and grilled over wood fire. It started in the early 1800s when the Gauchos (European immigrants that settled in the Rio Grade do Sul area) would get together and start a fire, adding large portions of meat on skewers and slowly grilling the meat.


In the restaurants, known as churrascarias, the skewers are paraded across the restaurant in a flashy manner, and the waiters circulate among the tables in order to show off the succulent meat to hungry diners. After the customers have chosen their preferred type of meat, it is sliced off the skewers to the dining plates. 
VARIATIONS OF Churrasco

MOST ICONIC Churrasco

1
Baby Beef - Cristiano Machado
04

Snack

SÃO PAULO, Brazil
4.4
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One of Brazil's favorite street foods, coxinha (lit. little thigh) is a crispy croquette filled with chicken meat and cream cheese that is cleverly shaped into a chicken drumstick, then breaded and deep-fried. Coxinha originated around São Paulo in the 19th century, and by the 1950s it spread to Rio de Janeiro and Paraná, having now become one of the most popular salgados (savory appetizers) across the country.


Legend has it that coxinha was first made for the Brazilian princess Isabel's son who only liked chicken thigh meat. However, according to food historians, it was probably invented during the industrialization of São Paulo to be marketed as a cheaper and more durable substitute to traditional chicken cuts that were sold at the gates of local factories as snacks for the workers. 

MOST ICONIC Coxinha

1
Boca do Forno
05

Street Food

BAHIA, Brazil
4.2
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In Bahia, the northeastern state of Brazil, there is a dish that is considered to be the most popular street food around, called acarajé. It consists of black-eyed peas or cowpeas that are formed into a ball, deep-fried in dendé palm oil, split in half, then stuffed with flavorful, spicy pastes made from numerous ingredients such as cashews, palm oil, and shrimp.


The most common accompaniments to the dish include a tomato salad and homemade hot pepper sauces. The recipe for the dish originated during the colonial period of the country, from the Nigerian slaves who first started selling it on the streets of Brazil. 

MOST ICONIC Acarajé

1
Baiana do Acarajé
06

Burger

BRAZIL
3.9
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X-Tudo is an unusually tall burger originating from Brazil. Although not much is known about its invention, this burger (which means with everything or cheese everything when translated) has no fixed ingredients, but it always has many toppings.


They often include beef patties, bacon, lettuce, tomatoes, corn, melted cheese, sausages, and fried potato sticks or shoestring potatoes. This mammoth of a burger is typically served in paper trays, and eating it is no easy feat – most people can't get their mouth around it because it's so huge, which makes for a messy eating experience.

MOST ICONIC X-Tudo

1
X-Tudo Sanduíches - Unidade Savassi