A Portuguese stew of seven meats and five vegetables, sealed in a cast-iron pot, buried in a geothermal hole at the edge of Furnas lake, and cooked for six hours with neither flame nor electricity. Volcanic steam does the entire job. The result: meat that falls apart, vegetables that taste of earth.
The recipe was born of necessity (firewood was scarce) and became the gastronomic signature of the island. Today, restaurants pay the municipality for a designated hole at the lake. Each morning at 5 a.m. the pots go in. By 12:30 p.m. they come out. It's spectacle and food at once.