Sign up with email

or

Already a member? Log in.

Trouble logging in?

Not a member? Sign up!

Let’s say you have only two or three days in Rio. You want to experience a little real Brazilian culture and don’t want to restrict yourself to the obvious tourist stops, overhyped bars and restaurants or usual “gringo” nightlife spots. Our recommendation? Spend a night or day – or both, even – at Feira de São Cristóvão.

The feira, which means “fair,” is organized by people from the northeast (nordeste), which is the poorest region in the country. That poverty has led millions of northeasterners to migrate to Rio over the last 50 years to seek a better life. And Feira de São Cristóvão is where they express themselves culturally, musically and, last but not least, gastronomically.

The fair takes place every weekend, from Friday afternoon through Sunday night, nonstop. The venue, located in the neighborhood of São Cristóvão, is an enormous old velodrome, now permanently packed with regional food, craft and music stalls.

More than 10,000 people visit the feira every weekend. Most of them are northeastern immigrants, but there are plenty of cariocas and tourists too – and they are undoubtedly there because northeastern culture is surely one of the most fascinating things about Brazil.

Every weekend, at least two big stages and a dozen smaller ones host nonstop performances of forró, a music genre with a magnetic beat – anchored by the insistent ring of the humble triangle – that makes everybody dance all night long. The fair is also the place to buy northeastern handicrafts, all at very reasonable prices. But the main draw, of course, is the food – typical northeastern dishes at stands of every size, all across the venue.

The big stalls operate like real restaurants and offer substantial, cheap and unforgettable meals, most of them made with goat meat or dried beef (the northeast’s famous carne de sol). One especially popular dish is buchada de bode (goat offal), which we highly recommend. Less exotic but equally tasty are the typical combinations of dried meat and pumpkin (jabá com jerimum) and northeastern-style rice and beans, made with sliced bananas and meat (baião de dois).

Musicians at Feira de São Cristóvão, photo by Yigal SchleiferYou can find all of those dishes – and much more – at stands like Barracão do Aconchego, Flor do Nordeste, and Maria and Getúlio, which are among the most well known. But really any restaurant you find at the fair will serve you excellent and honest northeastern food.

The big restaurants are just part of the show. At Feira de São Cristóvão, there are also smaller stands slinging appetizers, beverages and candy, selling such specialties as acarajé, the typical Afro-Brazilian street food of balls made from mashed black-eyed peas and fried in azeite de dendê (palm oil), which is always served by traditionally dressed baianas (Bahian women). We recommend getting the dish with caruru, a thick sauce made from okra, onion, shrimp and toasted nuts.

Once you’re ready for dessert, you can try the coalho cheese, which we love mixed with honey, rapadura candy, made from sugarcane, or cocada candy, made from coconut.

This is all just scratching the surface, however. The northeast is big: It’s composed of nine states, each with its own food and music culture. And accordingly, Feira de São Cristóvão offers seemingly infinite possibilities for exploration. It warrants multiple visits – we recommend going at least a dozen times. However, if you have just a few days in Rio, one visit is okay. But absolutely compulsory.

(top photo by Vinicius Camiza; above photo by Yigal Schleifer)
  • CB Book ClubNovember 30, 2019 CB Book Club (0)
    In our experience, one of the best ways to learn about noteworthy new cookbooks is to […] Posted in Elsewhere
  • AzarpheshaFebruary 14, 2020 Azarphesha (0)
    Up above Freedom Square where the Sololaki and Mtatsminda neighborhoods blend together, […] Posted in Tbilisi
  • September 12, 2012 An App Now on Our Menu! (0)
    We are proud to announce that Culinary Backstreets’ first iPhone application is […] Posted in Istanbul

Published on September 11, 2014

Related stories

November 30, 2019

CB Book Club: Authors’ Picks of 2019

Elsewhere | By Culinary Backstreets
ElsewhereIn our experience, one of the best ways to learn about noteworthy new cookbooks is to sidle up to a food writer and ask what they’ve been cooking from. With that in mind, we asked the authors featured in our CB Book Club this year to share their favorite cookbook or culinary-related book from 2019.…
February 14, 2020

Azarphesha: A Sanctuary for the Living Arts

Tbilisi | By Paul Rimple
TbilisiUp above Freedom Square where the Sololaki and Mtatsminda neighborhoods blend together, there is a 100-year-old building with an apartment five steps below the sidewalk. It’s a warm, intimate space, part living room, part museum. A massive collection of wine glasses hang from the ceiling, 19th-century framed portraits of Georgians decorate one wall above a…
September 12, 2012

An App Now on Our Menu!

Istanbul | By Istanbul Eats
IstanbulWe are proud to announce that Culinary Backstreets’ first iPhone application is here! For almost a year we’ve been sorting through comments and suggestions from readers of IstanbulEats.com to help us develop the ultimate iPhone application for eating locally and authentically in Istanbul. We know Istanbul is a tough city to navigate, so our app’s…
Select your currency
USD United States (US) dollar
EUR Euro