A historic and iconic dish: rice, beans, collard greens, fried banana, pork chops, sausage, and a fried egg, often served with tutu (mashed beans with manioc flour). A colonial-era feast still beloved today. 1)
A towering sandwich packed with sliced mortadella, sometimes with cheese or mustard, served on a crusty French roll — famously served at the Mercadão Municipal. 2)
Not to be confused with the northeastern version! This is a savory, molded cornmeal dish with eggs, sardines, shrimp, olives, and vegetables — served cold, often at family gatherings. 3)
Mashed beans with manioc flour, garlic, and lard, topped with crispy pork cracklings — hearty and deeply rooted in rural traditions. 4)
“Fat beans”: pinto beans slow-cooked with various pork cuts, sausages, bacon, and sometimes kale. Rich, smoky, and satisfying. 5)
Rustic stewed chicken with okra, tomatoes, garlic, and annatto — a countryside staple brought by Afro-Brazilian and Indigenous cooks. 6)
An original São Paulo sandwich made with roast beef, tomato, mozzarella, and pickles, served on crustless French bread — created at the Ponto Chic restaurant in the 1930s. 7)
A robust tripe and white bean stew, seasoned with tomatoes, onions, and chili pepper — often served with white rice and parsley. 8)
São Paulo is pizza central in Brazil. What’s unique? The thin crust, wood-fired style, and creative toppings like catupiry cheese, hearts of palm, or even stroganoff. 9)
A countryside snack of fried banana mashed and mixed with manioc flour, sugar, and cinnamon — sweet, hearty, and beloved in small towns. 10)
Fresh-pressed sugarcane juice (caldo de cana) served with roasted peanuts — a classic pairing sold at street markets and roadsides. 11)
Soft or fried Italian-style polenta topped with rustic chicken or pork ragu — a rural-Italian fusion that became a staple in São Paulo’s interior. 12)
Thanks to Lebanese and Syrian immigration, open-faced savory pastries (esfihas) with ground meat, cheese, or spinach became wildly popular — with São Paulo's own crust style and spice blend. 13)
Sunday pasta with tomato sauce and beef roast, pork ribs, or sausage simmered in the sauce for hours — a tradition in Italian-Brazilian families from Mooca to Brás. 14)
Fried rice balls made from leftover rice, often filled with cheese or sausage and served in botecos (neighborhood bars). Crispy, gooey, and full of comfort. 15)