Slightly adapted from the recipe of Chef Jose Avillez and inspired by the bacalhau à brás I ate at a restaurant called Solar Moinho de Vento in Porto, Portugal. Don't forget to soak the salt cod overnight, replacing the water one or two times, to make sure the cod isn't too salty. —Stephanie Andrews
Stephanie Andrews, who developed this recipe, wrote about how food transformed her trip to Portugal. You'll definitely want to try making her favorite recipe at home if you can't catch a flight there any time soon: "While the Portuguese have more than 1,001 different recipes that include bacalhau—don’t worry, I didn’t try them all—I found the bacalhau à brás to be both a soul lifter and the ultimate comfort food. The dish contains crisp, shoestring potatoes swimming in warm, creamy egg, interlaced with generous heaps of flaky shredded fish. It revived my body and my weary mind. I went back three times to a restaurant called Solar Moinho de Vento just for this dish. I’d like to think that it was what kept me from succumbing to the cold—which I now realize was physical and emotional—that was brewing when I first arrived.
"While I would wholeheartedly recommend hopping on the next flight to Porto and immediately ordering this dish, it’s actually surprisingly easy (and much cheaper) to make from the comfort of your own home. In most of these traditional fish-based dishes, dried salt cod is the gold standard. This means placing the dried fish in cold water overnight to remove the excess salt, draining and re-filling with fresh water a couple of times. (This is a step that must not be skipped; trust me, I learned the hard way.) You’ll want to spend a little extra time de-boning and removing the skin from the salt cod the next day, if applicable. While it might be a pain, think of it as a labor of love." —The Editors
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