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Brazilian cookery: cheesy footballs recipe

June 8, 2014 1 Comment Filed Under: Baking, Brazilian, canapés, Cheese, Food, Recipes, Vegetarian

This recipe, ‘pao de queijo’, cheese bread, is adapted from The Cabana cookbook, a beautifully designed cookbook with Brazilian recipes. I’ve tried this recipe a few times from other sources and this one is the best so far. I used something called ‘sour starch’ from Yoki, a manufacturer of Brazilian foods that you can often find in small stores. This sour starch is gluten-free and made from manioc or yuca or cassava. You can really see the African influence on Brazilian cookery with this ingredient; it is popular in Africa and Brazil, with a high carbohydrate count but very little protein. There is also ‘sweet manioc starch’ from the same manufacturers which is finer. A combination of both gives you both the chewy inside and crispy outside of the classic pao de queijo. The most important one however is the sour starch, you won’t get an authentic result without it.

This is a like a New World version of cheese puffs.
Print

Cheesy footballs recipe or Pao de queijo:

This is something to snack on with a few beers while watching the footy. You can buy the two types of starch at Brazilian shops.
Notes:  Don't make the balls too big.The dough can be made ahead of time and frozen into little balls. You can heat them up directly from the freezer.
Course Snacks
Cuisine Brazilian
Keyword Football snacks, Pae de queijo
Serves 30 balls

Ingredients

  • 125 ml whole milk
  • 50 ml vegetable oil
  • 1 tsp sea salt
  • 175 g sour starch
  • 75 g sweet manioc starch
  • 2 eggs
  • 200 g strong cheddar, or Parmesan

Instructions

  • Preheat the oven to 200c. In a small saucepan heat up the milk, oil, and salt.
  • Once it starts to boil, pour it straight into a stand mixer then, very quickly, dump in all of the flour and mix on a low speed until the dough is thoroughly mixed and coming off the sides.
  • Then add the eggs, keep mixing on a low speed, until thoroughly combined. Finally add the cheese until fully mixed and you have a smooth shiny dough.
  • Pinch off small amounts, walnut-sized balls, smooth them into spheres and place on a prepared (with parchment paper or a silicon mat) baking sheet.
  • Bake for approximately 15 minutes until golden. Eat straight away while hot. Great with hot sauce and a cool beer.

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Comments

  1. Anonymous

    August 10, 2016 at 8:51 pm

    Yumm…My daughter went to med school in Dominica and sent me a similar recipe. I now make them all the time. They are addictive. I was unaware of the different types of cassava, and will try your version when I find them. Thanks Marie

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