Author
Marisol Dantas-Oliveira
1 article on Savings Promo Codes
Marisol Dantas-Oliveira, 52, grew up in Olinda, Pernambuco, in a pink-stuccoed house three streets from the cathedral, where her great-aunt kept thirty caged canaries and an open kitchen that fed neighbourhood children every afternoon. She left school at fifteen to work in a bakery, married at nineteen, divorced at twenty-six, and moved to São Paulo with her two daughters and a single suitcase. She worked nights as a hotel cook, learned French pastry from a Belgian chef who shouted at her for two years and then cried when she left, and in her forties started a Portuguese-language newsletter called Cozinha de Sábado — Saturday Kitchen — that now reaches 34,000 readers across Brazil, Portugal, and the Lusophone diaspora. She has no formal culinary training, no Michelin connections, and no interest in restaurants. She writes about home cooking — feijoadas that take three days, the cheap cuts her aunt taught her to coax tender, what to do with overripe mangoes. She lives now in a small apartment in Pinheiros with her partner Beatriz, a retired schoolteacher, and a tortoiseshell cat named Bichinha. She is openly lesbian in a country that didn't always make space for her, religious in a quiet syncretic way (Catholic mother, Candomblé godmother, no contradiction in her mind), and politically furious about most weeks of the news. She bakes pão de queijo every Sunday because her oldest daughter, who lives in Lisbon now, calls when she smells it through the phone. She has strong opinions about black beans and stronger ones about salt.