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  • - Hey dudes, I'm Hilah and today on Hilah cooking

  • we're making Feijoada, which is a Brazilian,

  • it's kind of a quintessential Brazilian

  • beans, rice, sausages, collard greens, oranges.

  • Sounds a little weird when you

  • put it all together like that,

  • but it's really delicious comfort food.

  • My friend Tuany, who you've seen before.

  • We've made pão de queijo, we've made moqueca,

  • we've made coxinha, we've made brigadeiro.

  • Done all those videos, I'll put links to them

  • if you want to see some more Brazilian food.

  • Her mom came to visit last month for two weeks

  • and while she was here, she came over

  • and taught me how to make feijoada.

  • So we made a little video,

  • just a video of our dinner party,

  • but it will teach you how to make feijoada,

  • so if you wanna just do that,

  • you can just fast-forward about 30 seconds.

  • But I need to tell you something, too.

  • Obviously they speak Portuguese, native language,

  • I don't speak any Portuguese,

  • I speak English and a little bit of Spanish,

  • but Hita, Tuany's mom, speaks Spanish,

  • so that's why you'll hear us speaking Spanish to each other,

  • 'cause it's, we just figured out

  • that was the easiest way for us to communicate.

  • If that's a little confusing then that's why.

  • And I put all the instructions

  • and a link to a printable recipe

  • down in the description box,

  • so if you have any questions, you can refer to that.

  • Also, I'm still doing my podcast,

  • I'm doing a podcast every week.

  • I did Laura Vitale,

  • we did Elise Strachan from My Cupcake Addiction,

  • we did Rob Nixon, and we made it in Japan,

  • so I'll put a link below for that, too,

  • so you can check out my new podcasts

  • where I interview Youtube stars.

  • Okay, onto the feijoada.

  • We're gonna start out with beans

  • that have been soaked overnight.

  • Here Hita is showing me how the soaked beans

  • got all swole up compared to the dry beans.

  • So just add them to some fresh water,

  • put a lid on it, and bring it to a boil.

  • (girls speaking in foreign language)

  • For the rice, she brought over some parboiled rice,

  • which honestly I had never used before.

  • It's, I think it's like a rice

  • that's been pressure cooked and then dehydrated again.

  • But anyway, we used parboiled rice.

  • It was two cups of rice in your pot,

  • then you add four cups of hot water

  • and a couple of chicken bouillon cubes.

  • - (speaking in foreign language)

  • (upbeat music)

  • (speaking in foreign language)

  • (laughing)

  • (speaking in foreign language)

  • - Then roll it up, sort of, into like

  • a really tight cigar shape, and then julienne it.

  • You get these really fine spaghetti strands,

  • almost, of collard greens.

  • I'm gonna put those in a pot of water

  • and boil them for about 30 minutes,

  • until they're sort of a dark green.

  • Okay, now it's time to check on our rice.

  • As the water cooks down, we're gonna keep adding

  • more hot water, maybe two more cups of hot water.

  • Let it cook for maybe 30 minutes, until it's tender.

  • Kind of a loose guideline there.

  • Now for the meats, we're using some sausages,

  • linguiça and paio, I think that's how you pronounce it.

  • (Hila speaking in foreign language)

  • What she's telling me here is that the sausages

  • that she gets in Brazil are usually all look-alike,

  • like the paio and the linguiça look alike.

  • The ones that we were able to get here

  • at the Brazilian market in Los Angeles look very different,

  • so you probably wouldn't need to necessarily do this.

  • But what she normally does at home

  • is cut the sausages into different shapes,

  • like at an angle or straight pieces

  • so that once it's all cooked,

  • you can tell which one is which.

  • I'm gonna add the sausage to the beans

  • once the beans have started to get a little bit soft,

  • after about 30 minutes of cooking,

  • and just let that all cook together.

  • So then while we're waiting for

  • the beans and the rice to cook,

  • we can start prepping the oranges,

  • and oranges are traditionally served

  • with feijoada to enhance digestion,

  • that's what Hita told me,

  • so she was also very impressed

  • with the quality of oranges that we have in California,

  • so patting myself on the back,

  • not that I grew them or anything.

  • - (speaking in foreign language)

  • - Ooh, there's oranges?

  • This needs oranges.

  • - [Hita] (speaking in foreign language)

  • - (speaking in foreign language)

  • - [Hita] (speaking in foreign language)

  • - While everything's cooking,

  • we're gonna sort of make the seasoning for the feijoada.

  • So we chopped up some garlic,

  • chopped up some cilantro, some onion.

  • Throw that in a pot with a little bit of oil

  • and saute it quickly.

  • Then add maybe half a cup of the bean cooking liquid.

  • Bring that to a boil, let it cool.

  • Now blend up that feijoada seasoning

  • with the onions and the garlic

  • and the cilantro and the bean water.

  • Now we're gonna add that seasoning paste to the beans

  • and let it cook another 30 minutes or so.

  • And she kept showing me a spoon of the bean liquid,

  • and she was describing it as dirty,

  • so it's ready when that liquid looks dirty.

  • So when the liquid itself is dark, dark, almost black,

  • all the color of the beans has leached out

  • and permeated the water and even the meats,

  • like all the sausages and stuff kinda turn that color, too,

  • that's when you know it's ready.

  • And of course also test the bean

  • and make sure that you can pinch it easily

  • between your fingers and that it tastes good.

  • And to season the collard greens,

  • we're just gonna do a little bit of garlic in olive oil

  • and a little bit of chicken bouillon

  • and just saute that together until it looks a little sticky.

  • And add the drained collard greens

  • and toss that seasoning all through

  • the shredded collard greens.

  • - One, two, three!

  • (cheering)

  • - Meant to serve it, they said usually the meat

  • is taken out and put in a separate bowl

  • and then the beans are served separately

  • so that everyone can pick what parts they want more of.

  • The rice, the collard greens,

  • the oranges for your digestion,

  • and then a little bit of farofa,

  • which is a toasted tapioca flower.

  • We got all these sort of weird ingredients

  • at the Brazilian market,

  • but you can also order online

  • and I'll out some links down below

  • if you want to try to order it.

  • I hope you really enjoyed that,

  • it was really fun to make a different kind of cooking video.

  • Hope you found it helpful

  • and hope that you make some feijoada.

  • Don't forget I have started a podcast.

  • I started a podcast back in January.

  • It's Hilah's Happy Hour, it's on iTunes,

  • it's on SoundCloud, blah blah blah.

  • I've been interviewing a ton of Youtubers that y'all know,

  • and some other people that aren't cooks,

  • that are just interesting people, so some yoga people.

  • Anyway, check that out, I'll put a link below,

  • and also I'll put a card up here

  • where you can check it out on my website.

  • Oh, Chef John, too, Chef John, that was a really good one!

  • Alright, thank you so much for sticking around.

  • I'll probably be doing some more videos

  • once in awhile on this channel.

  • So just check back in, subscribe to my newsletter too,

  • I'll send out a weekly newsletter with updates

  • and blog posts and recipes and behind the scenes stuff.

  • So if you wanna do that, then that'd be a great way

  • to keep up with my new, random video schedule.

  • Okay, bye!

- Hey dudes, I'm Hilah and today on Hilah cooking

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如何做Feijoada | 希拉烹飪學 (How to Make Feijoada | Hilah Cooking)

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    林宜悉 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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