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  2. Pão de queijo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pão_de_queijo

    Casa do Pão de Queijo at the Afonso Pena International Airport, in São José dos Pinhais, Paraná, Brazil. In Brazil, pão de queijo is a popular breakfast dish and snack. It continues to be widely sold at snack bars and bakeries, and it can also be bought frozen to bake at home. In Brazil, cheese puff mix packages are easily found in most ...

  3. Brazilian cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brazilian_cuisine

    Pão de queijo (literally "cheese bread"), a typical Brazilian snack, is a small, soft roll made of manioc flour, eggs, milk, and minas cheese. It can be bought ready-made at a corner store or frozen and ready to bake in a supermarket and is gluten -free.

  4. Cheese bun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cheese_bun

    Pão de queijo. Cheese buns or cheese breads may refer to a variety of small, baked, cheese-flavored rolls, a popular snack and breakfast food in Brazil. Cheese buns may be made with cassava and or corn starch, and cheese.

  5. Pan de queso - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pan_de_queso

    Pan de queso is one of the breads (along with pandebono and buñuelos) that is made with fermented cassava starch. Fermented starch allows biscuits to become light and voluminous. [4] A similar food is prepared in Brazil, known as pão de queijo. [2] Pão de queijo is common in the southeast of Brazil, especially the Minas Gerais region. [5]

  6. List of Brazilian dishes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Brazilian_dishes

    Queijo de coalho A firm and lightweight cheese produced in Northeastern Brazil , with an almost 'squeaky' texture when bitten into. It is a popular snack on the beach in Brazil, where walking vendors brown rectangular slabs of it in hand-held charcoal ovens.

  7. Pão de Ló - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pão_de_Ló

    Pão de Ló (plural: pães de ló) is a Portuguese sponge cake made of eggs, sugar, and wheat flour. Unlike other cakes or breads , yeast or baking powder is generally not used. Rather, to provide volume, air is suspended into the cake batter during mixing.

  8. Coxinha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coxinha

    Different variations of the original are becoming more prevalent today – for example, the coxinha mineira, for which the filling includes maize, so named because maize is deemed a culinary tradition in the state of Minas Gerais, as well as areas where the caipira and sertanejo dialects are spoken.

  9. Portuguese cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portuguese_cuisine

    Other well known cheeses with protected designation of origin, such as Queijo de Azeitão, Queijo de Castelo Branco. Queijo mestiço de Tolosa , is the only Portuguese cheese with protected geographical indication [60] and is made in the civil parish of Tolosa, part of the municipality of Nisa, which itself has another local variation within ...