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Pitos e Ganchas, the portuguese sweet that oozes sexual allusions.

2 min read

Here we are:

We are in Northern Portugal’s city of Vila Real. Here, in December and February, a curious annual tradition begins on December 13, during the feast of Saint Lucia (Santa Luzia).
Girls present boys with pumpkin jam: filled pastries folded into square parcels, known as pitos de Santa Luzia.
Nuns living in the local Santa Clara convent, established in 1602, are thought to have been behind the treat, blending lots of cinnamon and sugar into the pumpkin filling.


On February 3, the feast of Saint Blaise (São Brás), boys return the favor: they present girls with ganchas.
Made of hardened caramelized sugar, these candy cane–shaped sweets are designed to resemble the honored saint’s staff.
If the allusion of exchanging a folded sweet for a long candy staff wasn’t obvious enough, the term “pitos”, is also slang for female genitalia in Portuguese.

Local bakeries make pitos year-round, with a production spike around December 13. This is because the pastry is a symbol of the area’s culinary heritage, and because it’s really delicious. However, Ganchas are made especially for the feast of Saint Blaise.

Sources: noticiasdevilareal.com, portoenorte.pt, publico.pt, folclore.pt.
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