Alheira de Mirandela: the false sausage
Mirandela, Trás-os-Montes, Portugal
One of the most remarkable culinary inventions in Iberian history — a smoked sausage created by Portuguese Jews during the Inquisition to appear as if they were eating the forbidden pork products their neighbours hung in their windows. Alheira is made from chicken, bread, olive oil, garlic, and paprika — no pork — and has a softer, more open texture than chorizo or chouriço.
Mirandela, in the Trás-os-Montes region of northern Portugal, is the production centre. The IGP designation protects the original recipe. Modern versions may include pork or game, but the original is and has always been poultry-based. The technique of using bread to bind the sausage meat produces a uniquely Portuguese product with no equivalent elsewhere.