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Well-intentioned food appreciators have often made the error of believing that touristy is the opposite of authentic. The same goes for tourism and cultural exploration in general. The relentless search for the most local anything becomes based not on how locals themselves regard this thing but on how many fellow outsiders like ourselves have found it. (The fewer, the better, so goes the logic.) The localness of the thing is inverted, with the outsider becoming the arbiter of what is “authentic.” But if we, the outsiders, put so much effort into finding what is local, what’s wrong with locals making a similar effort to reach out to us?

We reject this silly authentic/touristy dichotomy. Dropping the pretension on all sides would open far more gastronomical doors.

With its bilingual menu and staff, romantic mood lighting and jazzy ambient music, Aprazível doesn’t have the trappings of a backstreet find. Tourists love it, and we’ve heard reports that Brazilians have popped the question here. We couldn’t endorse it more highly.

In a city where temperatures frequently reach above 100 degrees F, many carioca dining joints count on their sliding doors and air conditioning units attracting diners as much as the food itself. Aprazível took the opposite tack. Before Ana Castilho bought this house about two decades ago, the previous residents had included a hippie collective of artisans. That’s because it hardly looks like much of a livable family space.

Dessert at Aprazível, photo by Lianne MiltonPerched on a steep hillside in the historical Santa Teresa neighborhood, Aprazível’s space stretches up about 100 feet. The daunting rock face that forms the back of its top floor was built as a contention wall by African slaves in the 19th century. The restaurant’s nearly 6,000 square feet are a series of patios and tree houses covered by thatched roofs and tiled ceilings and connected by thick stone steps. Light fixtures hang from the trees that droop into diners’ space. The forest around and inside the dining rooms includes a tree species near extinction, in addition to orchids, bromeliads, banana trees, bamboo and the curious rhipsalis, all tended by Aprazível’s full-time gardener.

Castilho says the Swiss Family Robinson construction happened naturally. She purchased the property when she saw a drawing of it on a piece of paper while she was studying gastronomy in New York. In her early days, she cooked on a conventional stove while a helper held an umbrella over her head. She recalls when a celebrated architect came to the restaurant: “He said, ‘This architecture is so beautiful! I said, ‘What architecture? This was a spontaneous construction.’”

Aprazível, photo by Lianne MiltonCastilho’s contemporary Brazilian cuisine consists of thoughtfully prepared national favorites, like moqueca (fish and coconut milk stew) and cabrito (goat cooked in wine and served with yam and caramelized onions). She says her menu is so suited to the Brazilian palate that she hasn’t changed it in 19 years. Her signature appetizer is the palmito fresco assado, heart of palm slow-cooked until tender and served on a bamboo plate with cashew pesto. Our most important tip: be sure to save room for the desserts, such as the steamed guava cooked in passion fruit sauce and the carimbó, Brazil nut ice cream served with cupuaçú jelly.

Authentic, touristy, local and beloved: Castilho’s home lives up well to its name. Aprazível means “pleasurable.”

 
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Lianne Milton

Published on March 17, 2014

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