Migas alentejanas are the Alentejo’s answer to stuffing, polenta and Yorkshire pudding all at once: day-old bread soaked and slowly rolled in a pan with garlic and paprika-rich pork fat until it forms a golden, creamy-centered roll — served alongside crackling pieces of fried pork.
They complete the region’s holy bread trilogy with the two açordas already on the site: where açorda soaks, migas fry — same humble loaf, entirely different magic. The pork is traditionally marinated in massa de pimentão, the red pepper paste behind my carne de porco à alentejana.
The rolling technique sounds mystical and is actually just patience with a wooden spoon: fold, press, roll, repeat, until the bread confesses and turns into a torpedo of golden comfort.
Migas Alentejanas Recipe
Prep time: 20 minutes (plus 2+ hours marinating) · Cook time: 40 minutes · Total: about 3 hours · Servings: 4 · Calories: ~520 per serving
Ingredients
- 1½ pounds pork (belly, secretos or shoulder), cut into chunks
- 2 tablespoons red pepper paste (massa de pimentão)
- 3 garlic cloves, crushed, plus 2 more sliced for the migas
- ½ cup white wine
- 1 pound day-old dense country bread, sliced
- Hot water, for soaking
- 3 tablespoons olive oil (if needed, to supplement the pork fat)
- 1 teaspoon sweet paprika
- Salt and pepper, to taste
- Orange wedges, to serve (trust the Alentejo on this)
Instructions
- Marinate the pork in the pepper paste, crushed garlic, wine, salt and pepper for at least 2 hours.
- Fry the pork in a wide pan until browned and cooked through, then set aside, leaving the precious fat behind.
- Meanwhile, moisten the bread slices with hot salted water — damp and soft, not drowned.
- Add the sliced garlic (and olive oil if the fat runs short) to the pan, then the squeezed bread and paprika.
- Cook over medium heat, folding and pressing with a wooden spoon, then rolling the mass against the pan sides, 15 to 20 minutes, until a golden crust forms around a creamy heart.
- Shape into its traditional roll, slide onto a platter, surround with the pork, and serve with orange wedges.
Recipe Notes
- The orange is not decoration — a bite of migas, a bite of pork, a segment of orange is the complete Alentejo experience.
- Asparagus migas and cabbage migas are seasonal cousins worth exploring once the technique is yours.
- The pan fat carries the dish; this is not the recipe for restraint, and the Alentejo would not forgive it.

