Tags
Brazil, Churrascaris, Churrasco, cold brazilian beer, Food, reastaurants brazil, steak houses brazil
CHURRASCARIAS:
Countries usually have a traditional dish or special meal for which they are known. In Brazil this is the Churrasco (barbecue) and the restaurants are Churrascarias (steak houses), where all-you-can-eat meat is served at your table by a team of waiters (garcons) carrying skewers, each of which will a have a specific type of meat. Combine this with very, very cold and very, very good Brazilian beer and you must have what many would call an “eating event” or perhaps a Brazilian “Shock and Awe” of eating.
HOW IT WORKS:
You select your table. You will be asked what you wish to drink. If there are a couple of serious beer drinkers, then I suggest ordering a 600ml bottle. It will either come in a Styrofoam holder or perhaps you will get a ice bucket with two or three bottles. I won’t go into the different beers now. As far as I am concerned they are all very good, but others differ and are loyal consumers of a particular brand.
PLATES:
Some churrascarias will have plates on the table. If so, grab your plate and head to the salad bar. Other churrascarias have the plates near the salad bar.
Eating utensils are almost always on the table. Notice the pincher with teeth!
SALAD BAR:
The salad bars have a wide variety of offerings..potato salad, cheery or sliced tomatoes, heart of palm, peas, carrots, etc. and presented in a variety of styles.
THE MEAT RUNS:
The waiters (garcons) will start passing by your table almost immediately with long skewers of a specific type of meat. Don’t worry about understanding them…if it looks good nod your head yes. The waiter will slice off a small portion. When you sat down at your table perhaps you noticed a small utensil like a pincher with teeth…that is what you use to secure the meat while the waiter is cutting.
COST:
Out of the large urban areas, will run around US$13.00 per person at lunch time; in the evening for a couple US$ 17.00. In the big cities and fancy churrascarias more like US$23.00. Drinks not included. Exchange rate of US$ 1.00 = R$1.77
LINKS:
SIDENOTES:
- Some churrascarias (upscale) will offer fixed-plate meals in the American steak house style.

You should also keep an eye out for good deals. The churrascaria’s close to “touristy” areas charge more than those usually frequented by the locals, away from the beaches and resorts. Some of the churrascaria’s along the BR may seem like “greasy spoon” joints, but a good rule of thumb is, lots of trucks and buses parked out front usually mean good eatin’!! And be careful, I remember once in Rio I saw them charge a German couple more than they charged me and my girlfriend. When it comes to the high end churrascaria’s, it’s hard to beat Fogo de Chão.
Daniel,
Thanks for the input. Good points.
As a tourist you must remember and this is true for all tourist around the world, that you can get taken! It is up to you to do the research to protect yourself. In the interior of Brazil, you shouldn’t have any problems. Most tourist cities: Recife, Natal, Salvador, Rio among others, you gotta stay awake!
Taxis are the most serious rip off threat. Always ask someone you trust what the cost will be from A to Z.
Not a response but some questions you may be able to assist with. If i can afford to buy a nice house in a decent area in the north (Fortaleza) and have about $5,000 USD to spend every month without working would i be able to enjoy the sights of Brazil without being affected by the proverty and the hardship that you have gone through so far?. I also have young children that i want to educate well. I cant afford the private schools would be able to employ good brazillian teachers full time to teach my children. What would be your advice on the schooling? . I look like i am from India and my wife is white (russian) would we be able to travel around without attrating a lot of attention. Would we be safe ??
Hi Derek,
You can live well on US$ 5,000 disposable income unless the dollar tanks which could happen. The exchange rate controls your purchasing power here and of course, you have no control over it.
I can’t comment on your educational plan for your children. Not my area.
You will be as safe as anyone traveling around Brazil. There are lots of different skins colors here ranging from black-black to white-white and everything in between.
If you don’t speak Portuguese you will suffer here.
ExpatBrazil
Derek,
Forgot to mention visas. Living in Brazil on a Tourist Visa is for backpackers; not someone planning on living here. Thus, you need the permanent visa, which is difficult to get.
ExpatBrazil
PS: For visa info go over to http:://www.gringoes.com.br
Thanks for the information. Can you advise on the price for benzine at the gas stations, any taxes payable, meat/fish/ fruits in the market
Hi Derek,
Benzine?
All believe all foods are taxed. Not at the checkout, but on the food companies. There was a TV program, which went through the supermarket and showing the taxes on different items. The government does well here.
ExpatBrazil
benzine i ment gas or ethanol for the cars. In the supermarket what is the average cost for beef, chicken and fish
Hi Derek,
I’m working on updating the Cost of Living post. But take a look at it now. Will give you an idea.
ExpatBrazil
thanks it was what i was looking for