The fried, sweet, and spectacular foods of the world's great pre-Lent celebrations
The Last Feast Before the Fast
[[carnival]] (from the Latin 'carne vale' — farewell to meat) is the festival held in the days before Ash Wednesday, when Lent begins and Catholics traditionally abstain from meat, dairy, and excess. The logic of carnival eating is explicit: consume everything rich, fried, and indulgent before forty days of restraint. This theological context has produced some of the world's most exuberant street food traditions.
Carnival began as a medieval European Catholic tradition but traveled through colonization to the Americas, Africa, and the Caribbean, where it merged with indigenous and African culinary traditions to produce unique local food cultures. Today the world's great carnival celebrations — Rio de Janeiro, Venice, New Orleans, Trinidad — are defined as much by their food as their music and costume.
Brazil: Carnival's Culinary Capital
Brazilian carnival food spans street snacks to regional specialties that vary by city:
**Coxinha**: The most beloved Brazilian street snack — a teardrop-shaped croquette of shredded chicken encased in wheat-and-potato dough, breaded and deep-fried until golden. Their name means 'little thigh,' referencing their shape. Vendors sell thousands during carnival in São Paulo and Rio.
**Acarajé** (Salvador de Bahia): Black-eyed pea fritters deep-fried in dendê (palm oil), split open and filled with vatapá (a spiced paste of bread, dried shrimp, peanuts, and coconut milk), caruru (okra stew), and salad. Acarajé is an Afro-Brazilian culinary tradition brought by enslaved Yoruba people — in Candomblé tradition, it is sacred food offered to the deity Iansã. Street vendors, traditionally dressed in white Baianas costumes, cook acarajé over portable stoves.
**Pastel**: Thin, square or half-moon pastry pockets filled with cheese, shrimp, or minced meat, fried until impossibly crisp and blistered. Brazilian market pastels are the perfect carnival walking food.
Venice: Fritole and Galani
Venice's carnival (Carnevale di Venezia) is among the oldest in the world, and its traditional foods are specific to the season:
**Fritole** (or Frìtole): Small, round fried doughnuts made from a yeast batter enriched with pine nuts, raisins, and grappa. They are dusted with powdered sugar and sold by the paper cone from frying vendors (fritoleri) who once held the exclusive right to sell them during carnival. Their recipe dates to at least the 16th century.
**Galani** (also called chiacchiere across Italy): Light, crisp ribbons of dough flavored with lemon zest and grappa, deep-fried and dusted with powdered sugar. Called chiacchiere (gossip) in Milan and Naples, frappe in Rome — the name varies by region, but the concept is universal across Italy.
New Orleans: Mardi Gras Food
New Orleans Mardi Gras has produced its own distinctive food traditions, blending French, Spanish, African, and Native American culinary heritage:
**King Cake**: The most iconic Mardi Gras food — a ring-shaped sweet bread in the Epiphany tradition, decorated with purple, gold, and green sugar (representing justice, power, and faith). Hidden inside is a tiny plastic baby; whoever finds it must buy the next king cake or host the next Mardi Gras party. New Orleans bakeries produce hundreds of thousands of king cakes between Epiphany (January 6) and Mardi Gras.
**Beignets**: Square pieces of deep-fried choux pastry dough, buried under powdered sugar and served hot from the fryer. Café du Monde in the French Quarter has served them since 1862 and sells them in orders of three, around the clock.
**Crawfish Étouffée and Gumbo**: The richer Creole dishes of Louisiana — crawfish étouffée (shellfish smothered in a butter-based sauce), seafood gumbo (okra-thickened stew), and jambalaya (rice cooked with sausage and shrimp) — are the celebratory foods of Mardi Gras season.
Trinidad: Doubles and Carnival
Trinidad's carnival, held before Ash Wednesday, is celebrated with the island's beloved street food. Doubles — two thin bara (fried flatbreads made from flour and turmeric) stacked with curried channa (chickpeas) and topped with various chutneys (tamarind, pepper, cucumber) — are eaten for breakfast throughout carnival season. Introduced by Indo-Trinidadian vendors in the 1930s, doubles are now the most democratic street food in the Caribbean: cheap, portable, and beloved by all communities.
Fastelavn: Scandinavian Carnival Buns
Scandinavian countries celebrate Fastelavn (Shrove Sunday), the carnival before Lent, with semlor — Swedish cardamom-spiced wheat buns filled with almond paste and whipped cream. Denmark calls them fastelavnsboller and fills them with cream or jam. The tradition of eating these rich, cream-filled buns dates to the medieval practice of consuming all dairy and fat before the Lenten fast — a tradition so beloved that Swedish demand for semlor stretches from December to Easter.
Pancake Tuesday: British and Irish Tradition
Shrove Tuesday — the day before Ash Wednesday — is Pancake Day in Britain and Ireland. Thin crêpe-style pancakes, eaten with lemon juice and sugar or golden syrup, were traditionally a practical way to use up eggs, butter, and milk before Lent. Pancake races — running while tossing a pancake in a pan — are held in villages across England, the most famous at Olney in Buckinghamshire, dating to 1445.