Balsamic Pasta and Rodizio Dining

February 5, 2009


I haven’t been a fan of balsamic vinegar for very long. I used to find that its flavor was too sour, too intense. As time has gone on, I am realizing that it was more the quality I was buying that was causing the problem rather than the actual vinegar itself.

I find that I almost crave it now. I use it on my salads with olive oil all the time and my most recent discovery – balsamic vinegar with pasta.
Let me back up a little bit.

There is a type of dining here in Brazil called rodizio (hoe-dee-zee-oh). If you’ve been to a Brazilian steakhouse you somewhat get the idea, but the style extends way beyond this. Basically, you sit down to your meal and servers bring food around to you and you select as much as you want.

At a steakhouse the food of choice is meat, however, you can eat rodizio pizza, seafood, sushi and pasta in Brazil. There is a place in town that serves rodizio pasta here. I had heard that the chef was a very experienced gentleman who has lived in many cities in the world working for a Brazilian airline and their associated hotels. Lucky for us he then move to Maringa and opened his pasta rodizio restaurant.

Let me first explain that gourmet dining or anything remotely close is a rarity here. There are few nice restaurants in town, but most of them serve meat after meat after meat. There isn’t much variation or what I would call culinary skill involved. I’m not saying it doesn’t take skill to make good meat, but that is a cultural thing here. Almost all men know how to make it well. However, culinary art remains at only a couple restaurants in town.

Before I go on I must also fit in a quick aside. A few weekends ago in my links I mentioned that we eat out here much more than we did in the US because the prices are so incredibly reasonable. This meal is a perfect example. This buffet of excellent pastas served to you in a dimly lit, date-night atmosphere came in at R$15 per person. That’s U$ 6.58 a person at the current exchange rate.

Here is a bit of a photo tour of some of the dishes before I explain my balsamic dish.

First there was a salad of greens topped with a pickled eggplant and, of course, rice. I have yet to be to a restaurant here focusing on any type of cuisine that did not serve rice.


A sweet coconut flan-type cup sitting in a spoonful of an herb and pepper sauce. A very interesting contrast of flavors.


Pasta with a sauté of chopped pears and cinnamon.


The unique award went to our dessert – Chocolate Gnocchi. It was traditional homemade potato gnocchi served in a hot chocolate sauce with hot pepper. The sweet flavor with a very subtle heat in the back of the throat was perfect. I would love to try and recreate this.


There were many other things like lasagna scented with cinnamon, spaghetti with garlic and oil, and sweet potato dish with a honey mustard topping and chicken, but I will stop there.

About half way through the meal the waiter brought out this dish. I could tell right away from the smell that it contained balsamic vinegar so I gladly accepted.


It was a tortellini-like pasta fill with a strong cheese in a balsamic vinegar. Seems too simple to be exciting, but the contrast of the flavor of the cheese with the tartness of the vinegar was excellent.

I was in the kitchen the other deciding on a lunch. I had zucchini that needed to be used and then I noticed a small bowl of left over cheese tortellini from a previous meal. They sell a variety of fresh pastas in the supermarket it here and it’s an easy go-to dinner on the nights I don’t feel like putting forth much effort. So I took my leftovers and set out to recreate the dish similar to the one from the restaurant.

I was thrilled with the results and I can’t wait to make it again! I went heavy on the veggies so I would need less pasta. It is delicious, but also a bit heavy and high in calorie.

You can add the balsamic vinegar at any point during the cooking process. The heat will cook out the acidity making it sweeter. If you don’t like a strong flavor add it early. I like to add it after the dish is cooked because of the tartness and this most closely resembles the original dish.

Balsamic Vegetable Tortellini
Makes 1 serving

Olive oil
Small zucchini, chopped
¼ onion, sliced
1 clove garlic, chopped
½ to ¾ cup fresh cheese tortellini
2 Tbsp balsamic vinegar

Put just a bit of oil in your skillet and sauté veggies until they reach your desired consistency. I like mine still a bit crunchy. Add pasta to heat through. Toss with vinegar and serve.

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  • Tangled Noodle February 5, 2009 at 3:34 pm

    I’d love to experience rodizio dining – as you noted, we’ve been to a Fogo de Chao-type restaurant that serves an unending parade of roasted meat but I’d love to try sushi, pasta and pizza versions. I try to avoid one-price dining b/c I have a hard time controlling myself but the opportunity to taste different items is hard to resist. I’m totally intrigued by that coconut flan/pudding with a savory sauce and, of course, the chocolate gnocchi! Can’t wait to see a post if you decide to recreate it. I join you in the balsamic-has-grown-on-me category!

  • Joie de vivre February 5, 2009 at 3:47 pm

    The coconut flan with the pepper sauce does sound like it would be an interesting contrast!

  • Erica February 5, 2009 at 4:46 pm

    Thats so cool that it is inexpensive to eat out! I love balsamic vinegar. I also use it with a little olive oil on all my salads! Such a great combination. I bet its just wonderful with pasta! Thank you for the recipe

  • Heather February 5, 2009 at 5:11 pm

    ohhh. that pasta sounds just delicious. i love balsamic vinegar more than anything!!

  • lesley February 5, 2009 at 5:22 pm

    Rodizio dining sounds really neat, and that’s really nice that’s in inexpensive to eat out. Thanks for sharing! : )

  • Meg February 5, 2009 at 7:55 pm

    Chocolate gnocchi….WOW!

  • Daily Spud February 6, 2009 at 3:53 am

    Gosh – we don’t get anything that resembles rodizio dining over here. I think I would end up coming out of that pasta place feeling more full than is healthy because I wouldn’t be able to resist any of it! I mean, chocolate gnocchi, who could pass that up? 🙂

  • laura February 6, 2009 at 7:53 am

    Oh, I have some better quality balsamic vinegar that has been sitting the back of the pantry–your pasta dish would be perfect to try it. Thanks!

  • VeggieGirl February 6, 2009 at 9:06 am

    Lovely dishes!!

  • Candice February 6, 2009 at 11:53 am

    I really think I’m going to have to try the tortellini recipe. I love so many of the ingredients! Thanks for passing it along.

    Thanks also for the comment about house buying. It’s really helpful to hear other people’s thoughts. We are just going back and forth, but since that post we’ve started learning toward buying again so we’ll see!

  • Lori February 6, 2009 at 12:04 pm

    TN – I’m not a big fan of buffets either. Rodizio is nice because you can pace yourself a bit. It is nice too b/c they just give you a tiny portion of each. We actually saw a place in Vegas in the Mirage that was doing some Rodizio.

    Joie – It was okay. I loved the coconut thing. The sauces wasn’t bad, just didn’t do much for me. Certainly interesting. 🙂

    Erica – It is nice b/c we’ve been able to explore a lot of foods here on a budget. Yay for balsamic!:)

    Heather – I’m getting that way too. I need to find some more uses for it.

    lesley – It is a great way to try a lot of different things at one meal and not as, well, disgusting as a buffet. 🙂 I don’t like buffets.

    Meg – I loved it!

    Daily Spud – Funny you should say that. We were about the burst and asked to pay our bill. Then he told us about the gnocchi and we thought, well, I guess we can make room. Ha! I think I will only be able to go there on rare occasions. 🙂

    laura – That’s great! Hope it turns out well!

    Veggiegirl – Thanks!

    Candice – Glad I could help. I love the blogging world for that reason – lots of thoughts and opinions to help you develop your own. 🙂

  • lauren February 6, 2009 at 2:14 pm

    it’s settled. I need to move there. All those great eats and LESS expensive?! i can NOT get past the chocolate gnocchi…WHOA.

  • Passionate Eater February 6, 2009 at 2:41 pm

    You are very inspirational–I love how you can find an excellent meatless meal in a meat-centric country. And here’s to many more meals with balsamic vinegar (the good quality kind)!

  • gastroanthropologist February 7, 2009 at 1:47 am

    Lots of interesting flavors here – I’d love to try them all. That chocolate gnocchi sounds so good. I’m liking balsamic more and more too. The pasta sounds good- balsamic can probably stand up to a strong cheese so must a wonderful combination. Strawberries and balsamic ice cream are delicious together if you ever get a chance to try that!.

  • Lori February 8, 2009 at 12:02 pm

    lauren – Ha, ha! Totally crazy isn’t it. Who knew chocolate and gnocchi could be so awesome together!

    PE – Ha, ha! It is extremely difficult, but I do my best.

    gastroanthro- I haven’t had strawberries and balsamic yet, but I’ve heard it is great. I’ll have to try it soon. Oddly strawberry season falls in the autumn here which is spring in the northern hemisphere so they come around the same time.

  • thecleanveggie February 9, 2009 at 6:17 pm

    wow that sounds amazing 🙂

  • Mindy February 11, 2009 at 12:03 pm

    Mmmm…I’m going to have to try this–I love balsamic vinegar, but I’ve never thought to try it on pasta! And that flan sounds soooo interesting…

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