Fartura (food) explained

A fartura is a doughnut made of flour, yeast, baking soda, salt, sugar, cinnamon and water, that is fried in oil, in the form of a roll and traditionally sold at fairs in Portugal. It is preferable to consume them when they are hot so that the crunchy surface does not harden.[1]

Origins

Fartura comes from the Latin root ‘farto,’ meaning full or satiated.[2]

One theory is that the Portuguese, when trading in the Far East, would have brought with them new cooking techniques, including modifying the dough of Youtiao, also known as Youzagwei, in southern China. However, they would have changed the aspect to the star shape, because they did not learn the Chinese technique of "pulling" the dough (the Chinese emperor made it a crime with the death penalty if anyone shared knowledge with foreigners). As a result, the farturas are not "pulled" but extruded from a star-shaped mold.[3]

Another theory is that farturas may have been an adaptation of the Spanish churros, which were created by shepherds as a substitute for foods made with fresh pasta. Churro dough was easy to produce and fry over an open fire in the mountains, where shepherds lived most of the time.[4]

The food is part of the Arab influence in Portuguese cuisine, in using sugar instead of honey for sweetening. The fartura is a development of the original Arab zalabiya.[5]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Farturas, Crónica Virgílio Nogueiro Gomes. Luis. Matias. Associação Cozinheiros Profissionais Portugal.
  2. Book: Pharies, David A.. The Origin and Development of the Ibero-Romance -nc-/-ng- Suffixes. August 31, 2015. Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG. 9783110930832. Google Books.
  3. Web site: Churros: a secret history. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20120223032822/http://www.theprisma.co.uk/2011/07/17/churros-a-secret-history/. 23 February 2012.
  4. Web site: Churro encyclopedia. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20131204043230/http://ifood.tv/network/churro. 4 December 2013.
  5. Book: Sweet Delights from a Thousand and One Nights: The Story of Traditional Arab Sweets. Habeeb. Salloum. Muna. Salloum. Leila Salloum. Elias. June 25, 2013. Bloomsbury Publishing. 9780857723307. Google Books.