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Portuguese Foods and Culture
Domestic Life in Portugal
Portuguese domestic life follows traditional patterns and in many rural
areas regional costumes are much in evidence. Discipline of children and
courtship follow strict patterns. These factors may result in adjustment
problems when Portuguese emigrate to Canada and the United States. The
father is the household head, but Portuguese women frequently work side by
side with their husbands in agriculture, fishing, or factories. In fact,
many work activities are considered family affairs. After the work of
shucking corn, heating trees for olives, or picking grapes is completed, a
family picnic ending with singing and dancing is more the rule than the
exception.
It is typical of Portugal that modern methods are only implemented where
traditional ones are no longer feasible. If the old method works, why toss
it out? In the fields, ancient agricultural techniques are practiced
alongside modern mechanization.
This is true too of the Portuguese kitchen. Since three-quarters of
Portugal's people are engaged in agricultural pursuits, the country home
and kitchens dominate the country's way of life. Self-sufficiency is a
matter of great pride. Many types of homemade pork sausages, sausage-like
strings of lard, barrels of salted bacon flavored with hay leaf and
garlic, and of course a good supply of homemade wines, stores of fruits,
vegetables and grains stock the pantries and cool storage areas of the
Portuguese home. This is still a source of pride today.
Many communities share a huge cement and stone oven where breads and
confections may be baked. Kitchens glow with tiled floors and walls and
often tiled cooking areas. Few electrical appliances are used as
traditional mortar and pestle, hand coffee-grinders and strong arms do the
blending, crushing, chopping, mixing, and beating of kitchen chores.
Southern Portugal reflects many dishes of the Spanish cuisine such as
gaspacho, the cold vegetable soup; pudim flan, the sweet caramel custard;
and many dishes that are cooked all in one pot by steaming. The cataplana
is used especially in the Algarve, the southernmost province of Portugal.
Two rounded lids are clamped tightly together, cooking food on the stove
top like a type of pressure cooker and giving any food combinations a
moist freshness.
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