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Favorite Breakfast Foods in Brazil

cup of coffee with magazine and fresh flowers

In America, we love a big breakfast with eggs, potatoes, pancakes, and bacon. When we’re in a hurry, we tend to load up on starch with glazed donuts, muffins, or a bagel with cream cheese.

In Brazil, breakfast is usually on the lighter side. Lunch is a much heartier meal, so most Brazilians stick with coffee and a small plate. The name for breakfast is, in fact, café da manhã, which translates to “morning coffee.” The food you eat might change, but coffee in some form is essential.

Top 5 Brazilian Breakfast Foods

1. Pingado with French Bread

A favorite breakfast in Brazil is pingado with french bread or rolls. Pingado is a beverage made with steamed milk and just a splash of coffee. It can be plain or sweetened with sugar. It is paired with a warm baguette from the bakery, smeared with plenty of butter. 

Brazilian pingado drink with french bread
Pingado is traditionally served in a glass cup instead of a mug.

2. Acai na Tigela (Brazilian Acai Bowl)

Brazilians love fruit, so smoothies are also a popular breakfast item. A national favorite is made from frozen acai berries blended with guarana syrup. The smoothie mixture is served in a bowl with granola and fresh fruits, like strawberries and sliced banana. 

acai bowl with granola, strawberries, and banana
Acai is native to Brazil’s tropical rainforest.

3. Brazilian Cheese Bread (Pão de Queijo) With Deli Meat

Pao de queijo is a light and chewy puff made from tapioca starch and mozzarella or parmesan cheese. It is a very popular breakfast food that Brazilians like to eat plain or with slices of cured meat and cheese. You can also find stuffed Brazilian cheese breads, with fillings like spiced sausage or dulce de leche. All are gluten-free, bite-sized, and delicious.

Brazilian cheese bread on tray with coffee
Brazilian cheese bread can be eaten plain or stuffed with delicious fillings.

4. Bolo de Fuba (Brazilian Cornmeal Cake)

Brazilians love cake for breakfast! Pound cake and coffee cake are common, but a quintessential Brazilian breakfast cake is the bolo de fuba. This cake is made with finely ground cornmeal and traditionally served in a bundt shape. Some variations use coconut milk for a denser crumb. It can be topped off with powdered sugar, fresh fruit, or a drizzle of dulce de leche. 

Brazilian cornmeal cake with a slice missing
Bolo de fuba is made from cornmeal and buttermilk or coconut milk.

5. Brazilian Tapioca Crepes

These “crepes” are often simply referred to as tapioca and are made from just cassava flour and water. The mixture is lightly fried in a pan to form the crepe, which is then filled with things like coconut and condensed milk, melted cheese, or chocolate and bananas. 

Brazilian crepe made from tapioca flour on a plate
Brazilian crepes are made from just two ingredients: tapioca and water.

Try Brazilian Food at Home

You can enjoy churrasco from Texas de Brazil’s online butcher shop, featuring hand-curated boxes with premium cuts of meat delivered right to your door. Try your hand at home-grilled picanha, rack of lamb, chops, and zesty brazilian sausage. 

Sausage Stuffed Brazilian Cheese Bread

Jump to Recipe

Brazilian cheese bread in a bowl with cup of black coffee

Cheese bread in Brazil is a national dish that can be found in almost any bakery. More of a puff than a roll, the pao de queijo is similar in flavor and texture to the French gougère. 

While pao de queijo is traditionally eaten at breakfast with a cup of coffee, it can be enjoyed any time of day. Street vendors and bakeries often sell variations on the traditional recipe, offering cheese breads stuffed with fruit, vegetables, and meat.

In its purest form, Brazilian cheese bread is a bite-sized, crispy, chewy, gooey piece of Heaven. It is all-too easy to eat six or seven without batting an eye. Luckily, pão de queijo is relatively simple to make at home, so you don’t have to worry about running out. 

Brazilian cheese bread requires only a few ingredients, the most unusual of which in America is the cassava flour. However, this is readily found in most grocery stores. Another version you may be more familiar with is “tapioca flour.” Both tapioca and cassava flour come from the cassava root. The main difference is that tapioca has a slightly higher starch content, which makes it a superior thickener. 

This version adds a savory stuffing made from Brazilian sausage, or linguiça. Linguiças are made from minced pork and calabrese peppers, giving them a unique, zesty flavor that perfectly compliments the sweet, mild taste of the cheese. The taste is something akin to sausage rolls, but more delicate.

Brazilian sausage is available raw or smoked. We are using the smoked version in this recipe, since it adds another depth of flavor and makes it that much easier, since we won’t need to cook and drain the sausage. 

Sausage Stuffed Brazilian Cheese Bread

Ingredients:

16 oz tapioca or cassava flour
8 oz whole milk
2 oz vegetable oil
1 ½ cups grated parmesan cheese
2 eggs
1.5-2 tsp salt
½ pound smoked Brazilian sausage

Directions:

  1. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees Fahrenheit.
  2. Chop your smoked sausage so it is roughly minced. 
  3. Put milk, oil, and salt into a small saucepan and bring to a boil.
  4. Once the milk mixture has come to a boil, put it in a stand mixer along with the tapioca flour. Mix on medium speed until everything is evenly incorporated. At this point, the batter will be sticky and have some lumps.
  5. Let the dough cool for five minutes, then add the eggs one at a time on medium speed. The dough will look a little smoother now.
  6. Once the eggs are mixed in, add your cheese and minced Brazilian sausage and mix just to combine.
  7. Shape the dough into 2” balls and put them a few inches apart on a baking sheet lined with parchment paper. A 2” ice cream scoop makes measuring very easy. Also, if you find the dough is sticking to your hands, wet them with a little cold water or use some vegetable oil.
  8. Bake the stuffed cheese puffs in the oven until they are lightly golden, which takes about 30 minutes. Enjoy fresh from the oven. 

Freezer tip: these snacks are very convenient to have on-hand for family get togethers or Game Day. Make the dough balls ahead of time and allow them to freeze on a cookie sheet. Then put the frozen cheese bread in a freezer safe bag. When you are ready to eat, cook them just the same as you would fresh. They will keep for up to three months. 

Try Brazilian Sausage and Pao de Queijo at Texas de Brazil

Let us do the cooking for you! Visit one of our 50+ locations to try delicious, authentic Brazilian cuisine. Our cheese bread is a customer favorite, and our own brand of Brazilian sausages have a light, sweet heat you won’t find anywhere else. Book your table today or go online to our Butcher Shop to have some of our best cuts of meat, including our smoked sausages, delivered right to your door. 

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