Salame de chocolate is the dessert every Portuguese child learns first: crushed Maria biscuits folded into rich chocolate, rolled into a log, chilled, and sliced into rounds that look uncannily like salami — down to the powdered-sugar “casing” and the string tied around it for full deli effect.
It is the star of every birthday table and school fair, requires zero baking and zero skill, and uses the same beloved Maria biscuits behind my bolo de bolacha and natas do céu (both on the site). Portugal runs on those biscuits, and this is their chocolate destiny.
This version uses condensed milk instead of the traditional raw egg — friendlier for US kitchens, silkier in texture, and completely faithful in flavor. A splash of Port is the adult upgrade.
Salame de Chocolate Recipe
Prep time: 20 minutes (plus 4+ hours chilling) · Cook time: 5 minutes · Total: about 4½ hours, mostly chilling · Servings: 10 · Calories: ~295 per serving
Ingredients
- 7 oz Maria biscuits (about 24), broken into small pieces — not crumbs
- ½ cup (1 stick) unsalted butter
- 7 oz dark chocolate (60-70%), chopped
- ½ can (7 oz) sweetened condensed milk
- 3 tablespoons unsweetened cocoa powder
- 1 tablespoon Port wine (optional, and encouraged)
- Pinch of salt
- Powdered sugar, for rolling
- Kitchen string, for the full salami effect (optional)
Instructions
- Break the biscuits by hand into rough pea-to-almond sized pieces — the “fat” in the salami slices.
- Melt the butter and chocolate together gently, then stir in the condensed milk, cocoa, Port and salt until smooth.
- Fold in the biscuit pieces until fully coated.
- Chill the mixture 20 minutes, until moldable.
- Scrape onto plastic wrap or parchment and roll into a tight log about 2½ inches thick, twisting the ends like a candy wrapper.
- Refrigerate at least 4 hours, until firm.
- Roll the log in powdered sugar, tie with string if feeling theatrical, and slice into rounds to serve.
Recipe Notes
- Hand-broken biscuits, never food-processed — the irregular pieces make the signature mosaic.
- Chopped nuts, dried cherries or orange zest are welcome additions to the “salami.”
- It keeps 2 weeks refrigerated and freezes for months — slice frozen with a warm knife.
- Italian and Greek cousins exist (salame di cioccolato, mosaiko); the family resemblance is warm and acknowledged.
