Bairro: Bom Retiro
City: Curitiba, PR
Zipcode: 82120440
Phone: (041) 3352-0092
Hours: No Information Available
Cost: No Information Available
With a privileged view of the city, the climate is ideal for enjoying one of caipirinhas the house, like the billiard with canned peaches. The girl's Hill specializes in Brazilian dishes, snacks and highlights the shrimp bobo and tapioca as some of the requests.
Brazilian
For the most part any meal that is originally from Brazil, which include feijoada, moqueca, or churrasco. The name can be reasonably open to interpretation, and these establishments can regularly grant a diverse assortment of provisions. Brazilian cuisine, like Brazil itself, alternates very much by region. The usual crops on hand in each region add up to their characteristic.
Root vegetables like for instance cassava (locally known as mandioca, aipim, or macaxeira), yams, and peanuts, and fruits like açaí, cupuaçu, mango, papaya, guava, orange, passionfruit, pineapple, and hog plum are within the local ingredients applied in cooking. Brazilian pine nuts titled pinhão grow in a tree that is plentiful in the southern part of Brazil, and are a widespread national snack, and even a advantageous export. Rice and beans are an exceptionally common entree, as are fish, beef and pork.
A few typical dishes are caruru, which contains okra, onion, dried shrimp and toasted nuts (peanuts and/or cashews) prepared with palm oil until a spread-like consistency is created; feijoada, a simmered bean-and-meat dish; tutu de feijão, a spread of beans and cassava flour; moqueca capixaba, consisting of slow-cooked fish, tomato, onion and garlic topped with cilantro; and chouriço, a gently spicy sausage. Salgadinhos, cheese bread, pastéis and coxinha are prevalent finger foods, while cuscuz branco, milled tapioca, is a widespread dessert. Brazil is additionally well-known for its cachaça, a favorite native liquor utilized in the caipirinhas.
The European immigrants (largely from Germany, Italy, Poland and Portugal) were familiar to a wheat-based diet, and introduced wine, leaf vegetables, and dairy commodities in the Brazilian cuisine. When potatoes were not available they found how to use the native sweet manioc as a replacement. Lasagna and other pasta recipes are additionally very common.
In Brazil, there are many “bares”, or “barzinhos”, (pubs, little pubs) where people gather for happy hour to have caipirinhas, cocktails, beers and other beverages.
Snacks are very popular, many are dependent on the local foods, but many are very common all over Brazil. Polenta frita (fried polenta), pao-de-queijo (biscuits baked with cheese inside), salami Italiano, fried chicken wings, cod fish balls (deep fried pastry made with wheat flour, egg, and shredded cod fish), various cheeses, and olive platters.
It is very common for bars, called botequins, to have cafe-com-leite (coffee with milk) served in a shot glass, plus fresh french bread with butter for breakfast. This is a little unusual for most people, who are used to pubs as a night time venue.
People commonly gather in bars to watch sports events. Normally, these are soccer matches, which happen frequently and not only during the World Cup. Brazil has soccer tournaments throughout the year, and everybody has their favorite team. It isn't uncommon to see significant numbers of people promoting their team.
Brazilian pubs range from very informal, lower class establishments to very formal, higher end places. Unlike most North American pubs, most of these pubs are wide open to the public with no formal entrance.
The minimum age for drinking in Brazil is 18 years old, and if you look older than 18 it is very likely you won’t be asked to show your ID. Public drinking is allowed in most cities, and public areas.
Nearby Restaurants include Menina da Colina, Rose Petenuci Chocolates - Elias Joaquim, Bar do Victor, Bep´s Bar, Piegel Pães e Conveniências - São Lourenço, Albatroz - Mateus Leme, Ervin, Restaurante Toca - Frutos do Mar e Caranguejo, Cervejaria da Vila, Mamma Carmella, Mercearia Fantinato, Churrascaria do Darci, Confeitaria Rosinha, Schimmel, Cenacolo Restaurante e Eventos, China in Box - Ahú , Troppo Buono, Zapata Mexican Bar Centro Cívico, Ah! Zeite Bistrô, John Bull Pub.
Restaurants:
| Água Doce Cachaçaria - Desembargador Westphalen | Rua Desembargador Westphalen, 2063 |
| Água Doce Cachaçaria - Mateus leme | Rua Mateus Leme, 1430 |
| Armazém Santo Antonio | Rua Solimões, 344 |
| Benedita | Avenida Cândido de Abreu, 381 |
| Bossa Nova Bar | Rua Senador Xavier da Silva, 210 |
| Brazil Picante | Rua Alberto Folloni, 34 |
| Cantinho Mineiro | Rua Carlos de Carvalho, 150 |
| Engenho de Minas | Avenida Comendador Franco, 3506 |
| Estrela da Terra | Rua Jaime Reis, 176 |
| Joaquim José | Avenida Comendador Franco, 2777 |
| Mabu Parque Resort | Rua Manoel Valdomiro de Macedo, 2609 |
| Mambembe Cachaçaria | Rua Barão de Guaraúna, 550 |
| Menina dos Olhos - Alto da XV | Rua Itupava, 694 |
| Menina dos Olhos - Centro Cívico | Rua Manuel Eufrásio, 1550 |
| Menina Zen | Rua Itupava, 1353 |
| Michigan Avenue | Al. Dr. Carlos de Carvalho, 949 |
| Mineira Gostosa | Rua Mateus Leme, 491 |
| Pantagruel | R. Prof. Joaquim de Mattos Barreto, 416 |
| Papo Furado Botequim | Rua Bispo Dom José, 2259 |
| Restaurante Café Deville | Rua Comendador Araújo, 99 |
| Saaz Bier Bar | Alameda Presidente Taunay, 434 |
| Santo Graal Sociedade Gastronômica 24 Horas | Rua Gonçalves Dias, 110 |
| Tempero de Minas | Rua Marechal Deodoro, 303 |
| Villa Sabor - Carlos Pioli | Rua Carlos Pioli, 563 |
| Vó Rosinha | Rua Benjamin Constant, 15 |
Other Cusines in Curitiba:
