https://www.northsouthfood.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/pork-heart_new.jpg
521
600
Miss South
https://www.northsouthfood.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/2014-North-South-star-logo-remix-final-master.png
Miss South2012-02-14 10:04:262014-10-28 07:55:55I heart pork!
Sticky, spicy ribs for a brilliant Bánh mì sandwich
There's been a bag of Porcus pork ribs in my freezer for…
https://www.northsouthfood.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/open-bacon1.jpg
597
800
Miss South
https://www.northsouthfood.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/2014-North-South-star-logo-remix-final-master.png
Miss South2012-02-05 11:16:062014-10-28 07:00:36Makin’ Bacon
https://www.northsouthfood.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/2014-North-South-star-logo-remix-final-master.png
0
0
Mister North
https://www.northsouthfood.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/2014-North-South-star-logo-remix-final-master.png
Mister North2012-02-02 16:37:512012-02-28 00:26:26Northern Stars Supper Club
Wise yer bap… put pasties on them!
Growing up reciting the Lord's Prayer everyday at school, it…

Tapas to light up your life: El Gato Negro at Guestrant
Hoary old blues crooners and popular folklore alike state…
https://www.northsouthfood.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/2014-North-South-star-logo-remix-final-master.png
0
0
Miss South
https://www.northsouthfood.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/2014-North-South-star-logo-remix-final-master.png
Miss South2012-01-25 10:58:252012-04-02 18:49:38Haggis Stuffed Onions
TV Dinners: A Question of Taste and beyond…
Well, as you may already know, Mister North is on TV tonight;…

The devil’s in the detail… Diablo SupperClub
Wednesday night saw us turn up to Chorlton's inimitable North…
https://www.northsouthfood.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/soup-1.jpg
393
600
Miss South
https://www.northsouthfood.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/2014-North-South-star-logo-remix-final-master.png
Miss South2012-01-17 13:29:012014-10-28 06:38:09A real split pea souper
Warming winter insulation
Ah, how I love the simple, comforting nature of a good home-made…

Sloe cured salmon and slow cooked goose…
Christmas may be over for another year, but some memories linger…

Feijoada – the ultimate pork and pulses dish?
/in Eating in, Local, Northern, Recipes/by Mister NorthAh, Feijoada: the national dish of Brazil, straddling the culinary and cultural tectonic plate boundaries of Africa, Europe and South America. Possibly the stoutest meal you’re likely to encounter, and enough to give any vegetarian a dose of the cold shivers.
Feijoada marries the southern European / Romance tradition of slow-cooked pork cuts and beans, but with the addition of west African and Amerindian flavours and techniques. It’s often described as originating from slave fare (the story being it was made up of scraps and offcuts of meat that plantation owners disregarded), but like many classic dishes comes loaded with myths and romanticised stories of its origin. Regardless, it reflects the melting pot culture of modern Brazil, which perhaps explains its extraordinary popularity across generation, class, race and region.
I vaguely remember reading about feijoada many years ago, amongst a glut of facts about Brazil gleaned from geography schoolbooks. At the time it didn’t really register…as a teenage boy I was focusing more on images of the impossibly gaudy and glamorous Carnaval and sugar cane-fuelled cars than meat-heavy dishes. A few years ago, as part of an impromptu South American-themed meal, a good friend brought her own version of feijoada, and that sparked my interest. Ever since I’ve resolved to make my own.
Regular readers are probably spotting a pattern here: yet another dish pairing pork products and pulses, and another opportunity to indulge in the joys of black pudding. Well yes, guilty as charged. And having access to some superb rare-breed pork from our friends at Porcus, I’m inclined to work my way through the world’s greatest pig ‘n’ bean dishes, one by one.
When it comes to feijoada there are a plethora of recipes out there. My well-thumbed go-to-guide for South American recipes, Felipe Rojas-Lombardi’s ‘The Art of South American Cooking‘, suggested one needs at least five types of pork in there, including the snout. Others suggest a bit of pork belly and sausage is enough. In the end I ploughed my own furrow, referencing recipes from the ever-enjoyable Flavours of Brazil blog and a smattering of others.
I’d previously procured a Tamworth tail and trotters (being able to source a pig tail generally points to it being raised ethically, as sadly most intensively-farmed pigs have their tails cut off) and had also set aside some artisan chorizo from the fabulous folk at Levanter Fine Foods. After visiting Miss South in Brixton, allowing me to pick up some genuine morcela de lamego from the wonderful Continental Deli on Atlantic Road, I was as ready as I’d ever be.
Here’s the final recipe: it took a day of preparation and cooking, but believe me, it was worth every minute.
Read more