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Portuguese sweet bread

Portuguese sweet bread refers to an enriched sweet bread or yeasted cake originating from Portugal.[1][2][a] Historically, these sweet breads were generally reserved for festive occasions such as Easter or Pentecost and were typically given as gifts.[6] However, in contemporary times, many varieties are made and consumed year round.[7] Outside of Portugal, Portuguese "sweet bread" translated as "pão doce" is often associated with Azorean "massa sovada" which are similar but traditionally prepared differently.[8][9]

Portuguese sweet bread
Loaves of folar de Chaves baking in a forno
TypeBread; pastry
Place of originPortugal
Main ingredientsFlour, milk, sugar, eggs, yeast, sea salt, butter or olive oil
Ingredients generally usedCinnamon, lemon zest, port
VariationsPão doce, arrufadas, folares, massa sovada, bolos, fogaça, regueifa
Similar dishesEaster bread, challah, Hawaiian rolls/bread, vada pav

History edit

The pão doce is of Spanish origin derived from a Renaissance era sponge cake known as pão-de-ló. In French cuisine, it would later be known as génoise, after the city of Genoa, and in Italy pan di spagna (lit.'Spanish bread'). The Portuguese would further develop this cake into what is now known today as pão doce.[10]

Many traditional Portuguese sweet breads are defined by the associated region or by the convents, artisan bakers or religious confraternities (similar to a guild) that historically made them. Since many have deep historical and cultural significance to the area which they originate from, these breads are as well as other foods and ingredients are inventoried by the Portuguese governmental office Directorate-General for Agriculture and Rural Development (DGARD), which collaborates with a collective of independent confraternities known as the Portuguese Federation of Gastronomic Confraternities (FPCG) throughout Portugal.[11][12]

 
Pão doce evolved as a yeasted cake variation of the Pão de Ló, a type of sponge cake that relies on beaten eggs.

There are currently ninety-three confraternities that specializes in various gastronomies varying from specific dishes or ingredients to a particular region of Portugal.[13][14] As an example, the Confraria Gastronómica As Sainhas de Vagos was given the responsibility of defining pão doce from Vagos,[9] while the similar pão doce das-24-horas from the same region is defined by the "Directorate-General for Regional Development" (DGRD),[15] while massa sovada from the Azores is defined by the Federação Portuguesa das Confrarias Gastronómicas.[16]

Variations edit

  • Arrufada (wikt:arrufada) originates from Coimbra which were once made by nuns of the Santa Clara convent. Historically, this bread was enriched with surplus egg yolks left over from wine clarification.[17][18] The bread is also enriched with milk, butter, sugar and sometimes cinnamon.[19] The nuns would later incorporate coconut as an exotic ingredient brought back from Asia during Portuguese exploration.[17] It is also known as pão de Deus or estaladinho.[20] It was typically given to the poor on All Saints Day, typically by children as a tradition called Pão-por-Deus (lit.'bread for God').[21]
  • Bola doce Mirandesa (lit.'sweet Mirandesa ball') is an artisanal yeast cake from Miranda do Douro similar to folar. It is enriched with eggs, butter and olive oil, and flavored with cinnamon. The dough is rolled out into a thin sheet and sprinkled with sugar and cinnamon. Unlike a cinnamon roll, it is layered like a cake with 6 to 7 layers before being baked.[22]
  • Bolo das Alhadas is an artisanal yeast cake from Figueira da Foz created by the baker Leonor das Alhadas.[23] It is enriched with sugar, eggs, lemon, butter, and cinnamon.[24]
 
Scoring the bolo de Ançã in the middle of baking
  • Bolo de Ançã is a mildly sweet artisanal yeast cake enriched with eggs, butter, and scented with lemon zest. Halfway through baking, the bread is scored with a knife creating small pointed ridges on the top.[25][26]
  • Bolo de Faca (lit.'knife cake') is a large yeast cake from Algarve which incorporates margarine, lard, olive oil, eggs, walnuts (or almonds), lemon zest, cinnamon and fennel.[27]
  • Bolo de S. Nicolau (lit.'St. Nicholas Cake') from Santa Maria da Feira is a yeasted cake enriched with eggs, sugar, butter, and milk and flavored with cinnamon and port wine. The loaf is braided and sprinkled with chopped almonds.[28]
  • Bolo Podre are mildly sweet, yeasted cakes from Castro Daire. It contains eggs, olive oil, butter, lard, and cinnamon. The dough takes 3 to 4 hours to rise, giving the name "rotten cake".[29]
  • Bolo Lêvedo (lit.'yeast cake') is a sweet sourdough muffin found in the Azores.[30] It resembles a large English muffin but is much sweeter and chewier.[31] This bread incorporates milk, eggs, and butter.[32] Some recipes include lemon zest or cinnamon. This bread was traditionally grilled on a stone tile with a wood fire beneath it.[33]
  • Bolo de Vesperas from the Azores is a yeasted cake using barley, lard, and butter prepared for Festa do Divino, a festival celebrating Pentecost. It is traditionally stamped with a symbols of the Cult of the Holy Ghost six times before baking, leaving dimples on the loaves after baking.[34] Regular wheat flour can be used when barley flour is not available.[35]
 
Members of several confraternities meeting during a festival in Santa Maria da Feira dressed in their distinct cloaks and headwear.
  • Bolo Rei (lit.'king's cake') is a yeasted cake typically served on the Feast of the Three Kings, otherwise known as Epiphany. It is a ring-shaped bread that is mixed with candied fruits resembling gemstones on a golden crown, the nuts for myrrh, while the sweet aroma of cinnamon or port mimic the scent of frankincense, representing the gifts of the Three Magi to the baby Jesus. The recipe was imported to Portugal around 1869 by the French, known as gateau des roi. Like its French counterpart, charms are customarily incorporated into the dough as prizes for the finder, while a dried fava bean representing the baby Jesus, signified the person who would pay for the next cake.[36][37] A bolo rainha (lit.'queen's cake') is a modern, alternative yeasted cake that omits the candied fruits. Rather, it is filled generously with nuts such as pine nuts, hazelnuts, walnuts, or almonds, and sometimes raisins.[38] Other modern versions include chocolate and walnuts.[39]
  • Broa Mimosa do Boco from Vagos is a yeasted broa, a bread that include cornmeal in addition to wheat flour. This bread is enriched with eggs, brown sugar, flavored with cinnamon and lemon peel.[40]
  • Esquecidos da Guarda (lit.'the forgotten ones of Guarda') from the Central Region is a sweet bread that resembles a large cookie.[41] It is simply made with just flour, eggs, sugar, salt and yeast.[42]
  • Fogaça da Feira is from Santa Maria da Feira.[43] This castle-shaped bread includes eggs, sugar, butter, lemons, and cinnamon.[44] When the area was hit by a plague in 1505, the townspeople prayed to Saint Sebastian and made an offering by presenting in his honor this sweet bread. A festival is now celebrated every January 20th to commemorate the saint.[45]
 
A bread oven in Algarve
  • Folar is a popular Easter bread enriched with eggs, sugar, milk and butter and often scented with aniseed, fennel seed, or cinnamon.[46][47] The folar may have been influenced by the Marranos, ethnic Sephardic Jews.[48] A variation of the Purim dish bourekas, which was also known as huevos de Haman or foulares, was a hard-boiled egg wrapped in dough (like a foulard) representing Haman in a jail cell.[49] However in Alentejo, they are sometimes shaped like animals.[7] There are folares stuffed with meats, such as the ones from Chaves, Valpaços and Trás-os-Montes.[50]
    • Folar da Páscoa vary by region, many contain hard boiled eggs, held in place by a cross of bread dough alluding to the festivites surrounding Easter.[51] Godparents traditionally gave each of their godchildren one of these cakes.[52]
      • Folar de Vale de Ílhavo are scented with cinnamon. The eggs are dyed by boiling the eggs with onion skin.
      • In Centro and Beiras, folares are sweet and commonly scented with cinnamon or fennel, which wraps a painted egg.[53][48]
    • Folar de Vouzela is enriched with a fair amount of butter and egg. Once the dough is prepared, it is filled with additional butter and sugar then shaped into a horseshoe then sprinkled with more sugar.[54] These folares were traditionally given to godparents by their godchildren.[55]
    • Folar de Olhão of the Algarve region is layered akin to monkey bread and is made with a combination of orange juice, butter, and Aguardente, port, brandy, or rum and topped with a combination of butter, honey, orange peel, cinnamon, and brown sugar.[56][57]
  • Massa Sovada (lit.'kneaded dough') is typically round loaves that are enriched with butter, eggs, milk, and sugar from the Azores traditionally eaten at Easter and on the Feast of the Holy Spirit.[58] It is sometimes flavored with fennel or lemon zest.[59] Sweet potato is traditionally used to activate the yeast.[16] Massa sovada is often paired with arroz doce.[60] It is also prepared for weddings, christenings, and anniversaries.[61]
  • Pão doce (lit.'sweet bread') is a sweet bread from the Central Region that traditionally required additional steps. An initial dough made of flour, yeast, butter, and salt was prepared. After resting, it is mixed with egg whites, olive oil (or butter), and lemon zest (or cinnamon) then baked after resting for twenty-four hours. It has a crust characteristic of wood oven bread since loaves were often baked upside down in order to develop a crescent-shaped split or crack. Historically, because of its ingredients and laborious preparation, it was expensive and made only for festive occasions although it is now made throughout the year.[9]
  • Pão doce das 24-horas from the Centro is a sweet bread enriched with eggs, olive oil and lard. The dough is rolled out and folded in half to create an elongated loaf.[15]
  • Pão de Leite (lit.'milk bread') is a non-traditional bread made with milk and is slightly sweet similar to Japanese milk bread. It is a favorite of children because it is fluffy and soft.[7]
 
Regueifa dance, brides with a loaf of bread on their heads.
  • Regueifa (wikt:regueifa) is traditionally a large round loaf with a hole enriched with eggs and sugar,[62] and flavored with cinnamon and port wine, once given away as a prize.[63] As such, it is now made exclusively for weddings,[64] with an associated wedding dance ritual.[65]
  • Regueifa da Pascoa (lit.'Easter 'brioche'') from Santa Maria da Feira is enriched with eggs, butter, and milk and flavored with cinnamon and port wine. The dough is braided and formed into a round loaf with a hole in the center.[66]
  • Viriato is named after the Lusitanian leader, Viriathus. It is a sweet bread from Viseu filled with an egg custard mixed with shredded coconut, and shaped into a "V".[67] It was created in the 1940s by Delfim de Sousa.[68]

Outside of Portugal edit

Portuguese sweet breads are common in areas with a large Portuguese diaspora population, such as New England, northern New Jersey, southern Florida, California, Ontario, and Toronto. They are also found in other former colonies including Brazil, Macau, India, Angola, Cape Verde, Guinea-Bissau, Mozambique, São Tomé and Príncipe, and the island of Timor.[69][70]

Bolos lêvedos are popular in the Cape Cod area with a large Portuguese population, including Rhode Island where they are sometimes known as "Portuguese muffins" or "pops".[60][71] They are eaten for breakfast with butter and jam or used for sandwiches.[72]

Massa sovada was brought to Hawaii by Portuguese immigrants from the Azores in the late 1800s and has since been adapted into Hawaiian cuisine.[73] It was frequently called "stone bread" because of its habit of turning hard as a rock within one day of baking. Robert Taira of King's Hawaiian tweaked the recipe to manufacture a mass-produced shelf-stable product known as "Hawaiian rolls". [74]

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Enriched breads and yeasted cakes are typically soft, sweet, yeasty, breadlike containing higher amounts of sugar, fats such as butter and oil (including eggs and milk), or flavorings such as cinnamon and lemon. Whereas lean breads only contain flour, salt, water and yeast and are hard and crusty.[3][4][5] Instead of yeast, cakes like Pão-de-ló rely on egg whites to "lighten" the cake batter, while American pancakes require baking soda (or powder).

Citation edit

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  3. ^ "The secret to baking enriched breads at home". theweek. 7 October 2014. Retrieved 11 October 2023.
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  6. ^ Service, Kentucky Cooperative Extension. Circular - University of Kentucky. College of Agriculture. Cooperative Extension Service. University of Kentucky, College of Agriculture, Cooperative Extension Service. p. 12.
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portuguese, sweet, bread, refers, enriched, sweet, bread, yeasted, cake, originating, from, portugal, historically, these, sweet, breads, were, generally, reserved, festive, occasions, such, easter, pentecost, were, typically, given, gifts, however, contempora. Portuguese sweet bread refers to an enriched sweet bread or yeasted cake originating from Portugal 1 2 a Historically these sweet breads were generally reserved for festive occasions such as Easter or Pentecost and were typically given as gifts 6 However in contemporary times many varieties are made and consumed year round 7 Outside of Portugal Portuguese sweet bread translated as pao doce is often associated with Azorean massa sovada which are similar but traditionally prepared differently 8 9 Portuguese sweet breadLoaves of folar de Chaves baking in a fornoTypeBread pastryPlace of originPortugalMain ingredientsFlour milk sugar eggs yeast sea salt butter or olive oilIngredients generally usedCinnamon lemon zest portVariationsPao doce arrufadas folares massa sovada bolos fogaca regueifaSimilar dishesEaster bread challah Hawaiian rolls bread vada pav Contents 1 History 2 Variations 3 Outside of Portugal 4 Gallery 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Notes 6 2 CitationHistory editSee also Pao de Lo The pao doce is of Spanish origin derived from a Renaissance era sponge cake known as pao de lo In French cuisine it would later be known as genoise after the city of Genoa and in Italy pan di spagna lit Spanish bread The Portuguese would further develop this cake into what is now known today as pao doce 10 Many traditional Portuguese sweet breads are defined by the associated region or by the convents artisan bakers or religious confraternities similar to a guild that historically made them Since many have deep historical and cultural significance to the area which they originate from these breads are as well as other foods and ingredients are inventoried by the Portuguese governmental office Directorate General for Agriculture and Rural Development DGARD which collaborates with a collective of independent confraternities known as the Portuguese Federation of Gastronomic Confraternities FPCG throughout Portugal 11 12 nbsp Pao doce evolved as a yeasted cake variation of the Pao de Lo a type of sponge cake that relies on beaten eggs There are currently ninety three confraternities that specializes in various gastronomies varying from specific dishes or ingredients to a particular region of Portugal 13 14 As an example the Confraria Gastronomica As Sainhas de Vagos was given the responsibility of defining pao doce from Vagos 9 while the similar pao doce das 24 horas from the same region is defined by the Directorate General for Regional Development DGRD 15 while massa sovada from the Azores is defined by the Federacao Portuguesa das Confrarias Gastronomicas 16 Variations editArrufada wikt arrufada originates from Coimbra which were once made by nuns of the Santa Clara convent Historically this bread was enriched with surplus egg yolks left over from wine clarification 17 18 The bread is also enriched with milk butter sugar and sometimes cinnamon 19 The nuns would later incorporate coconut as an exotic ingredient brought back from Asia during Portuguese exploration 17 It is also known as pao de Deus or estaladinho 20 It was typically given to the poor on All Saints Day typically by children as a tradition called Pao por Deus lit bread for God 21 Bola doce Mirandesa lit sweet Mirandesa ball is an artisanal yeast cake from Miranda do Douro similar to folar It is enriched with eggs butter and olive oil and flavored with cinnamon The dough is rolled out into a thin sheet and sprinkled with sugar and cinnamon Unlike a cinnamon roll it is layered like a cake with 6 to 7 layers before being baked 22 Bolo das Alhadas is an artisanal yeast cake from Figueira da Foz created by the baker Leonor das Alhadas 23 It is enriched with sugar eggs lemon butter and cinnamon 24 nbsp Scoring the bolo de Anca in the middle of baking Bolo de Anca is a mildly sweet artisanal yeast cake enriched with eggs butter and scented with lemon zest Halfway through baking the bread is scored with a knife creating small pointed ridges on the top 25 26 Bolo de Faca lit knife cake is a large yeast cake from Algarve which incorporates margarine lard olive oil eggs walnuts or almonds lemon zest cinnamon and fennel 27 Bolo de S Nicolau lit St Nicholas Cake from Santa Maria da Feira is a yeasted cake enriched with eggs sugar butter and milk and flavored with cinnamon and port wine The loaf is braided and sprinkled with chopped almonds 28 Bolo Podre are mildly sweet yeasted cakes from Castro Daire It contains eggs olive oil butter lard and cinnamon The dough takes 3 to 4 hours to rise giving the name rotten cake 29 Bolo Levedo lit yeast cake is a sweet sourdough muffin found in the Azores 30 It resembles a large English muffin but is much sweeter and chewier 31 This bread incorporates milk eggs and butter 32 Some recipes include lemon zest or cinnamon This bread was traditionally grilled on a stone tile with a wood fire beneath it 33 Bolo de Vesperas from the Azores is a yeasted cake using barley lard and butter prepared for Festa do Divino a festival celebrating Pentecost It is traditionally stamped with a symbols of the Cult of the Holy Ghost six times before baking leaving dimples on the loaves after baking 34 Regular wheat flour can be used when barley flour is not available 35 nbsp Members of several confraternities meeting during a festival in Santa Maria da Feira dressed in their distinct cloaks and headwear Bolo Rei lit king s cake is a yeasted cake typically served on the Feast of the Three Kings otherwise known as Epiphany It is a ring shaped bread that is mixed with candied fruits resembling gemstones on a golden crown the nuts for myrrh while the sweet aroma of cinnamon or port mimic the scent of frankincense representing the gifts of the Three Magi to the baby Jesus The recipe was imported to Portugal around 1869 by the French known as gateau des roi Like its French counterpart charms are customarily incorporated into the dough as prizes for the finder while a dried fava bean representing the baby Jesus signified the person who would pay for the next cake 36 37 A bolo rainha lit queen s cake is a modern alternative yeasted cake that omits the candied fruits Rather it is filled generously with nuts such as pine nuts hazelnuts walnuts or almonds and sometimes raisins 38 Other modern versions include chocolate and walnuts 39 Broa Mimosa do Boco from Vagos is a yeasted broa a bread that include cornmeal in addition to wheat flour This bread is enriched with eggs brown sugar flavored with cinnamon and lemon peel 40 Esquecidos da Guarda lit the forgotten ones of Guarda from the Central Region is a sweet bread that resembles a large cookie 41 It is simply made with just flour eggs sugar salt and yeast 42 Fogaca da Feira is from Santa Maria da Feira 43 This castle shaped bread includes eggs sugar butter lemons and cinnamon 44 When the area was hit by a plague in 1505 the townspeople prayed to Saint Sebastian and made an offering by presenting in his honor this sweet bread A festival is now celebrated every January 20th to commemorate the saint 45 nbsp A bread oven in Algarve Folar is a popular Easter bread enriched with eggs sugar milk and butter and often scented with aniseed fennel seed or cinnamon 46 47 The folar may have been influenced by the Marranos ethnic Sephardic Jews 48 A variation of the Purim dish bourekas which was also known as huevos de Haman or foulares was a hard boiled egg wrapped in dough like a foulard representing Haman in a jail cell 49 However in Alentejo they are sometimes shaped like animals 7 There are folares stuffed with meats such as the ones from Chaves Valpacos and Tras os Montes 50 Folar da Pascoa vary by region many contain hard boiled eggs held in place by a cross of bread dough alluding to the festivites surrounding Easter 51 Godparents traditionally gave each of their godchildren one of these cakes 52 Folar de Vale de Ilhavo are scented with cinnamon The eggs are dyed by boiling the eggs with onion skin In Centro and Beiras folares are sweet and commonly scented with cinnamon or fennel which wraps a painted egg 53 48 Folar de Vouzela is enriched with a fair amount of butter and egg Once the dough is prepared it is filled with additional butter and sugar then shaped into a horseshoe then sprinkled with more sugar 54 These folares were traditionally given to godparents by their godchildren 55 Folar de Olhao of the Algarve region is layered akin to monkey bread and is made with a combination of orange juice butter and Aguardente port brandy or rum and topped with a combination of butter honey orange peel cinnamon and brown sugar 56 57 Massa Sovada lit kneaded dough is typically round loaves that are enriched with butter eggs milk and sugar from the Azores traditionally eaten at Easter and on the Feast of the Holy Spirit 58 It is sometimes flavored with fennel or lemon zest 59 Sweet potato is traditionally used to activate the yeast 16 Massa sovada is often paired with arroz doce 60 It is also prepared for weddings christenings and anniversaries 61 Pao doce lit sweet bread is a sweet bread from the Central Region that traditionally required additional steps An initial dough made of flour yeast butter and salt was prepared After resting it is mixed with egg whites olive oil or butter and lemon zest or cinnamon then baked after resting for twenty four hours It has a crust characteristic of wood oven bread since loaves were often baked upside down in order to develop a crescent shaped split or crack Historically because of its ingredients and laborious preparation it was expensive and made only for festive occasions although it is now made throughout the year 9 Pao doce das 24 horas from the Centro is a sweet bread enriched with eggs olive oil and lard The dough is rolled out and folded in half to create an elongated loaf 15 Pao de Leite lit milk bread is a non traditional bread made with milk and is slightly sweet similar to Japanese milk bread It is a favorite of children because it is fluffy and soft 7 nbsp Regueifa dance brides with a loaf of bread on their heads Regueifa wikt regueifa is traditionally a large round loaf with a hole enriched with eggs and sugar 62 and flavored with cinnamon and port wine once given away as a prize 63 As such it is now made exclusively for weddings 64 with an associated wedding dance ritual 65 Regueifa da Pascoa lit Easter brioche from Santa Maria da Feira is enriched with eggs butter and milk and flavored with cinnamon and port wine The dough is braided and formed into a round loaf with a hole in the center 66 Viriato is named after the Lusitanian leader Viriathus It is a sweet bread from Viseu filled with an egg custard mixed with shredded coconut and shaped into a V 67 It was created in the 1940s by Delfim de Sousa 68 Outside of Portugal editPortuguese sweet breads are common in areas with a large Portuguese diaspora population such as New England northern New Jersey southern Florida California Ontario and Toronto They are also found in other former colonies including Brazil Macau India Angola Cape Verde Guinea Bissau Mozambique Sao Tome and Principe and the island of Timor 69 70 Bolos levedos are popular in the Cape Cod area with a large Portuguese population including Rhode Island where they are sometimes known as Portuguese muffins or pops 60 71 They are eaten for breakfast with butter and jam or used for sandwiches 72 Massa sovada was brought to Hawaii by Portuguese immigrants from the Azores in the late 1800s and has since been adapted into Hawaiian cuisine 73 It was frequently called stone bread because of its habit of turning hard as a rock within one day of baking Robert Taira of King s Hawaiian tweaked the recipe to manufacture a mass produced shelf stable product known as Hawaiian rolls 74 Gallery edit nbsp Arrufadas de Coimbra nbsp Arrufada pao de Deus nbsp Bola Doce Mirandesa nbsp Bolo das Alhadas nbsp Bolo de Anca nbsp Bolo Levedo nbsp Bolo Podre nbsp Bolo Rainha nbsp Bolo Rei nbsp Bolos de Vesperas nbsp Broa Mimosa do Boco nbsp Fogaca da Feira nbsp Folar da Pascoa nbsp Folar de Chaves nbsp Folar de Vouzela nbsp Folar de Olhao nbsp Massa Sovada nbsp Pao de Leite nbsp Pao Doce nbsp Requeifa Wedding bread nbsp Regueifa da Pascoa nbsp Viriato nbsp Portuguese sweet bread found in MassachusettsSee also edit nbsp Portugal portal nbsp Food portal Brioche Type of French bread Easter bread Bread traditionally eaten around Easter Ensaimada Pastry product from Mallorca Balearic Islands Pan dulce General name for a wide variety of Hispanic pastries Pandoro Traditional Italian sweet bread Paska bread Easter bread native to Russia Slovakia and Ukraine List of sweet breadsReferences editNotes edit Enriched breads and yeasted cakes are typically soft sweet yeasty breadlike containing higher amounts of sugar fats such as butter and oil including eggs and milk or flavorings such as cinnamon and lemon Whereas lean breads only contain flour salt water and yeast and are hard and crusty 3 4 5 Instead of yeast cakes like Pao de lo rely on egg whites to lighten the cake batter while American pancakes require baking soda or powder Citation edit Mills Kyle Grace 19 September 2023 Bun Maska Is The Light And Buttery Treat To Pair With Chai Tasting Table Retrieved 11 October 2023 Damat Damat Setyobudi Roy Hendroko Soni Peeyush Tain Anas Handjani Hany Chasanah Uswatun 25 September 2020 Modified arrowroot starch and glucomannan for preserving physicochemical properties of sweet bread Ciencia e Agrotecnologia in Portuguese 44 e014820 doi 10 1590 1413 7054202044014820 ISSN 1413 7054 Retrieved 11 October 2023 The secret to baking enriched breads at home theweek 7 October 2014 Retrieved 11 October 2023 Tandoh Ruby 7 August 2022 The Hard Won Pleasures of a Yeasted Cake The New Yorker Retrieved 11 October 2023 Vanderslice Kendall 5 November 2016 Enriched Bread Dough What It Is and How to Make It Foodal Retrieved 11 October 2023 Service Kentucky Cooperative Extension Circular University of Kentucky College of Agriculture Cooperative Extension Service University of Kentucky College of Agriculture Cooperative Extension Service p 12 a b c Bastos Jorge 26 March 2023 Everything about the typical Portuguese sweet bread Origins traditions and much more Portugal Things Portugal Things Retrieved 10 October 2023 Massa Sovada Portuguese Sweet Bread Portuguese Recipes liveluso 9 April 2020 Retrieved 10 October 2023 a b c Fernandes Daniel Pao Doce Produtos Tradicionais Portugueses in Portuguese Direcao Geral de Agricultura e Desenvolvimento Rural Retrieved 11 October 2023 Tavares Ines Pao Doce The Sweet Bread That Tells the Story of Lisbon www lisbon vip Retrieved 11 October 2023 Introduction Produtos Tradicionais Portugueses Direcao Geral de Agricultura e Desenvolvimento Rural Retrieved 19 October 2023 Ribeiro Adriana Miranda October 19 2022 Confraternities of Portugal culture and tradition at the table All About Portugal Retrieved 19 October 2023 Confrarias Federacao Portuguesa das Confrarias Gastronomicas in Portuguese Retrieved 19 October 2023 Confrarias Produtos Tradicionais Portugueses Retrieved 19 October 2023 a b Fernandes Daniel Pao Doce das 24 Horas Produtos Tradicionais Portugueses in Portuguese Direcao Geral de Agricultura e Desenvolvimento Rural Retrieved 11 October 2023 a b Fernandes Daniel Massa Sovada Produtos Tradicionais Portugueses Direcao Geral de Agricultura e Desenvolvimento Rural Retrieved 22 October 2023 a b Tavares Ines Arrufada de Coimbra A Portuguese Sweet Tradition www lisbon vip Retrieved 11 October 2023 Fodor s Portugal Fodor s Travel Publications 2005 p 252 ISBN 978 1 4000 1452 1 Retrieved 11 October 2023 Sweet Rolls Arrufadas easyportugueserecipes com 4 October 2013 Retrieved 10 October 2023 Abitbol Vera 21 April 2018 Pao de Deus 196 flavors Retrieved 11 October 2023 Pao de Deus Traditional Sweet Bread From Portugal www tasteatlas com Retrieved 10 October 2023 Fernandes Daniel Bola doce Mirandesa Produtos Tradicionais Portugueses Direcao Geral de Agricultura e Desenvolvimento Rural Retrieved 15 October 2023 Fernandes Daniel Bolo das Alhadas Produtos Tradicionais Portugueses Direcao Geral de Agricultura e Desenvolvimento Rural Retrieved 11 October 2023 13 Tesouros da Gastronomia Tradicional da Figueira da Foz Meet Figueira Meet Figueira in European Portuguese Retrieved 11 October 2023 Figueiredo Lucia Bolo de Anca Produtos Tradicionais Portugueses in Portuguese Direcao Geral de Agricultura e Desenvolvimento Rural Retrieved 11 October 2023 Carvalheiro Celia 15 September 2021 Receita de Bolo de Anca Momentos Doces e Salgados Momentos Doces e Salgados in European Portuguese Retrieved 11 October 2023 Fernandes Daniel Bolo de Faca Produtos Tradicionais Portugueses in Portuguese Direcao Geral de Agricultura e Desenvolvimento Rural Retrieved 11 October 2023 Fernandes Daniel Bolo de S Nicolau Produtos Tradicionais Portugueses in Portuguese Direcao Geral de Agricultura e Desenvolvimento Rural Retrieved 11 October 2023 Fernandes Daniel Bolo Podre Produtos Tradicionais Portugueses in Portuguese Direcao Geral de Agricultura e Desenvolvimento Rural Retrieved 11 October 2023 Bolo Levedo Sweet Muffin easyportugueserecipes com 4 March 2014 Retrieved 10 October 2023 Hippo Orange ed 28 June 2022 The Little Book of Bread Welbeck Publishing Group p 143 ISBN 978 1 80069 274 9 Retrieved 11 October 2023 Kowit Adam ed 16 November 2021 The Best of America s Test Kitchen 2022 Best Recipes Equipment Reviews and Tastings America s Test Kitchen ISBN 978 1 948703 78 9 Retrieved 11 October 2023 Ortins Ana Patuleia 20 October 2015 Authentic Portuguese Cooking More Than 185 Classic Mediterranean Style Recipes of the Azores Madeira and Continental Portugal Macmillan ISBN 978 1 62414 194 2 Retrieved 11 October 2023 Fernandes Daniel Bolos de Vesperas Produtos Tradicionais Portugueses in Portuguese Direcao Geral de Agricultura e Desenvolvimento Rural Retrieved 11 October 2023 Cheio Patricia 30 May 2020 Bolos de vespera Food With A Meaning in European Portuguese Retrieved 11 October 2023 Goldstein Darra ed 1 April 2015 The Oxford Companion to Sugar and Sweets Oxford UK Oxford University Press p 552 ISBN 978 0 19 931361 7 Anderson Lara Bean Rachel Doe Helen 2010 Portugal and Spain London UK Marshall Cavendish Corp p 654 ISBN 978 0 7614 7892 8 Retrieved 17 October 2023 Bastos Jorge 16 January 2022 Portuguese King Cake Portugal Things Retrieved 17 October 2023 Bolo Rei de Chocolate com Nozes Sweet Portugal Bakery Retrieved 17 October 2023 Fernandes Daniel Broa mimosa do boco Produtos Tradicionais Portugueses in Portuguese Direcao Geral de Agricultura e Desenvolvimento Rural Retrieved 11 October 2023 Tavares Ines Esquecidos da Guarda Uncovering the Forgotten Pastries of Portugal www lisbon vip Retrieved 11 October 2023 Fernandes Daniel Esquecidos da Guarda Produtos Tradicionais Portugueses in Portuguese Direcao Geral de Agricultura e Desenvolvimento Rural Retrieved 11 October 2023 Fogaca da Feira Traditional Sweet Bread From Santa Maria da Feira www tasteatlas com Retrieved 10 October 2023 Tavares Ines Fogaca de Santa Maria da Feira A Culinary Delight with a Rich History www lisbon vip Retrieved 11 October 2023 Turtle Michael 18 September 2012 A bun each year keeps the plague away Time Travel Turtle Retrieved 11 October 2023 M D Jeff Hertzberg Francois Zoe 6 November 2018 Holiday and Celebration Bread in Five Minutes a Day Sweet and Decadent Baking for Every Occasion Illustrated ed St Martin s Press p 273 ISBN 978 1 250 07756 1 Retrieved 11 October 2023 Tavares Ines Folar de Pascoa Embracing Easter Traditions with a Symbol of Rebirth www lisbon vip Retrieved 11 October 2023 a b Brochado Ricardo 26 March 2016 Folar a Sephardic heritage THE CITY TAILORS Retrieved 11 October 2023 Alhadeff Ty 26 February 2015 Sephardic Purim Customs from the Old World to the Pacific Northwest UW Stroum Center for Jewish Studies Retrieved 11 October 2023 Pao e Produtos de Panificacao Produtos Tradicionais Portugueses Direcao Geral de Agricultura e Desenvolvimento Rural Retrieved 12 October 2023 Ragoonanan Nita 31 March 2018 Folar da Pascoa 196 flavors Retrieved 11 October 2023 Lacerda I J 10 March 2015 Secrets of traditional Portuguese cookery 2nd Edition revised BoD Books on Demand p 12 ISBN 978 3 7347 7321 1 Retrieved 11 October 2023 Poiares M April 2023 Traditional Portuguese Easter food MSN com idealista pt Retrieved 11 October 2023 Fernandes Daniel Folar de Vouzela Produtos Tradicionais Portugueses in Portuguese Direcao Geral de Agricultura e Desenvolvimento Rural Retrieved 11 October 2023 Docaria Tradicional Camara Municipal de Vouzela in European Portuguese Retrieved 11 October 2023 Folar de Olhao Traditional Sweet Bread From Olhao www tasteatlas com Retrieved 10 October 2023 Patuleia Ortins Ana 28 March 2018 Algarvian Easter Bread Folar de Olhao Portuguese Cooking Retrieved 11 October 2023 Rito Maria Teresa Perdigao Santos Oliveira 2018 A Festive and Celebratory Sweet Bread of Azores Islands PDF Florianopolis Brazil Federal University of Santa Catarina pp 5973 5991 ISBN 978 85 62946 96 7 Fung Kathy 9 April 2020 Easter Recipe Massa Sovada Portuguese Sweet Buns Smithsonian Folklife Festival Retrieved 10 October 2023 a b Atwood Heather 15 July 2015 In Cod We Trust From Sea to Shore the Celebrated Cuisine of Coastal Massachusetts Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 1 4930 2236 6 Retrieved 11 October 2023 Webb Lois Sinaiko Cardella Lindsay Grace Jacob Jeanne 14 September 2018 International Cookbook of Life Cycle Celebrations Bloomsbury Publishing USA ISBN 978 1 61069 016 4 Retrieved 11 October 2023 Azevedo Tania 22 May 2020 A Portuguese favorite Regueifa doce recipe Taste Porto Retrieved 10 October 2023 Dorson Richard M 12 May 2011 Folklore in the Modern World Walter de Gruyter ISBN 978 3 11 080309 9 Retrieved 11 October 2023 Fry Douglas P February 2015 War Peace and Human Nature The Convergence of Evolutionary and Cultural Views Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 023246 7 Retrieved 11 October 2023 Fry Douglas P February 2015 War Peace and Human Nature The Convergence of Evolutionary and Cultural Views Oxford University Press p 518 ISBN 978 0 19 023246 7 Retrieved 11 October 2023 Fernandes Daniel Regueifa da Pascoa Produtos Tradicionais Portugueses in Portuguese Direcao Geral de Agricultura e Desenvolvimento Rural Retrieved 11 October 2023 Fernandes Daniel Viriato Produtos Tradicionais Portugueses Direcao Geral de Agricultura e Desenvolvimento Rural Retrieved 15 October 2023 Tomas Ferreira Catarina 15 November 2018 Delfim de Sousa foi o pai do viriato bolo criado em Viseu nos anos 40 Diario de Coimbra in Portuguese Retrieved 15 October 2023 Sankari Rathina 30 November 2017 How the Portuguese introduced oven baked bread to India Macau South China Morning Post Retrieved 10 October 2023 Mills Kyle Grace 19 September 2023 Bun Maska Is The Light And Buttery Treat To Pair With Chai Tasting Table Retrieved 11 October 2023 Trieger Kurland Ann April 25 2016 From a family s garage to the hands of celebrity chefs a Portuguese muffin s unlikely journey The Boston Globe BostonGlobe com Retrieved 11 October 2023 Reid Susan Portuguese Muffins Bolo Levedo Recipe www kingarthurbaking com Retrieved 11 October 2023 Portuguese Stone Oven Kona Historical Society Retrieved 10 October 2023 Perry Charles April 3 2002 The King of Hawaiian Sweet Bread Los Angeles Times Retrieved 17 November 2022 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Portuguese sweet bread amp oldid 1216583868, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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