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How to Grill Picanha – Easy Step by Step Guide

How to Grill Picanha – Easy Step by Step Guide

Learn how to grill picanha Brazilian style, in this simple step by step guide from Suzie Castello.
By Suzie Castello




What is a picanha? In American butcher-lingo it has been tragically baptized the “rump cap”. It is a triangular cut from the top of the, that’s right, rump region of the cow, and just like our rumps, it has a beautiful layer of fat.  It is not a muscle that moves much during the animal’s life, and so, remains tender.  The picanha’s blanket of fat lends the meat flavor and juiciness while protecting it from human error that may occur during grilling.  And because it is little known in North America and Europe, a picanha is a relatively cheap and plentiful national secret. Oops. Did I just say something I shouldn’t have?

When one thinks of churrasco, one often thinks of picanha.  But oddly enough, it is a relative newcomer to the tradition.  It only became popular after it was introduced by Hungarian butchers in São Paulo in the 60s serving immigrant workers at the Volkswagon plant looking to make tafelspitz*.  Once Brazilians came to know it they naturally decided to grill it.  By the 70s picanha became a sensation and the star of the show at any churracaria.  Today it has come symbolize “authentic” churrasco.

If you can get your hands on a picanha, here are a few tips on how to handle the cut in order to get the most out of your grilling efforts.

  1. The best way I can explain how to pronounce it is: pee-con-ya, with the emphasis on the con.
  2. Chose an aged picanha if you can.  Dry-aging is not common in Brazil, so I don’t have experience of having it that way.  The wet-aged cuts in vaccuum packs are very common here.  Great picanhas are exported in this way from Brazil, Argentina and Uruguay.  In Spanish the picanha is called tapa de quadril.
  3. The fibers run diagonally through the meat.
  4. The ideal weight for a whole picanha is between 1.3kg and 1.5kg (2lb 13 oz. – 3lb. 4oz.).  Anything larger than that is more than picanha, and surely includes a part of the tougher outer-thigh region running below the rump.  The wide end of the picanha is the thickest and the toughest part. The tip is heaven.
  5. To get the full Brazilian churrasco experience, use organic charcoal – the stuff that still looks like it came from a tree. Most Brazilians use reforested, eucalyptus charcoal lit with a couple of wads of newspaper and a good douse of clean-burning, sugar-cane alcohol.  We don’t use briquettes or lighter fluid here.  Your second option would to get adventurous and make a wood fire.  Just be careful that you use a good tasting wood and let your embers burn down to a glow before you grill.  Wood fires are hot.  The third alternative, and probably the easiest, is a gas grill.  It won’t add any flavors, but it also won’t wreck any.
  6. Put some sausages on the grill as soon as you prepare your fire.  As we don’t use lighter fluid, we prefer to get the fire going with some dripping pork fat.  Fresh Brazilian pork sausage is made with the thigh meat and is very similar to fresh Italian sausage.  These sausages are wide enough to take their time on the grill and drip enough fat to get the most timid fire raging.  Think of them as a way to whet the appetite, yours and the fire’s.
  7. Score the blanket of fat that covers the picanha
    Score the blanket of fat that covers the picanha.
  8. Score the fatty blanket on the picanha by making criss-crossing cuts into the fatty blanket covering one side of the picanha.  Fat behaves differently than meat when cooked.  It loses more liquid and therefore shrinks more.  By scoring the fat, you can prevent the piece from curling and dis-forming while it grills.  I also imagine that it helps to free the liquid deliciousness in the fat allowing to run into the meat fibers.
  9. A whole picanha ready for the grill, prepared restaurant-style
  10. When preparing a picanha for the skewer cut against the grain.  The picanha is a big piece of meat and should be cut again at home before it is grilled.  If you’d like to serve it on a big skewer like they do in churrascaria restaurants, cut the picanha in 3 pieces on a angle perpendicular to the fibers running diagonally through the picanha.  Then bend these pieces into semicircles, fat-side out,  and place them on one large oiled skewer.  This allows you to slice off delicatley tender pieces wothout having to remove the picanha from the skewer.   You can then rub the exposed surface with more rock salt and grill it some more.  Every slice will have that outer, salty, crusty grilled deliciousness of the first slice.  This is how they do it in churrascaria restaurants.
  11. Picanha cut into steaks to grill home-style.
  12. When preparing a picanha in steaks cut with the grain. If you don’t have the large skewer, you need not fret. You can grill a picanha home-style in thick steaks.  This way  is not as flashy, but I think the results are superior.  When dividing the whole picanha into steaks, cut the meat in the same directions as the fibers.  When you slice the grilled steaks to serve you will be slicing across the fibers creating deliciously juicy morsels each with their own little fatty edge.
  13. I have on more than one occasion cut the picanha the wrong way and it was still delicious.  Like I said, picanhas are really hard to mess up.
  14. Picanha steaks on the grill
  15. Roll the pieces of picanha in rock salt and nothing more.  The tradition of churrasco celebrates the flavors of the meat.  Marination or extra seasoning is reserved for cuts that are less tender and flavorful.  A picanha already has all the flavor and tenderness it needs.  A a little rock salt will seal in its juiciness and enhance its natural goodness.  I have found that using  table salt or kosher salt I have to use a large amount to do the job of sealing in the juices leaving the meat too salty.  Rock salt heats up and reacts like a cooking surface on the meat.  It also doesn’t penetrate nearly as much as finer salts resulting in a lightly salty crust. I don’t use anything fancy.  I like the kind used for making ice cream.
  16. Grill the steaks fat-side up for a few minutes until a little juice leaks out of the top of the steaks.  If you are grilling on the big skewer, both sides are the same, there is no fat-side.  Turn the steaks onto their sides to grill for a few more minutes.  Finally grill fat-side down moving the steaks away from the hottest part of the fire to avoid over-cooking and to reduce the chance of the fire flaring up from the dripping fat.  Grill to your desired doneness.  I use the finger poke to know if the meat is done.  Try not to puncture the meat when grilling.
  17. Finishing the picanha steaks fat-side down
  18. Remove the finished meats and tap them with the side of a knife to knock off any extra rocks of salt.  Let the meat rest a few minutes before slicing.
  19. Don’t be worried about serving the picanha all at once.  Just as in the churrascaria restaurants, meats are served a little at a time, as they come off the grill.  First serve the sausages sliced for everyone to enjoy a little at a time.  Then serve the pieces of picannha as they finish cooking.  There isn’t the idea of “that’s my steak, this one is yours” in churrasco.  All the meat is sliced and served very socially.  Guests can chose the slices that are more rare or more well done.  As the picanha was cut into three or four pieces, each steak is a little larger than the other allowing you to control doneness.
  20. Picanha as a part of the churrasco experience.
  21. All this polite sociability may break down when it comes to the tip of the picanha.  The tip is special.  This precious piece will cook a lot quicker than the larger pieces.  Either remove the tip early from the grill and hide it for yourself while the other larger pieces finish, or save the tip to grill last only offering it up once all the guests are sated.  As a last resort you could invent some story claiming that according to Tupi-Guarani myth the tip of the picanha traditionally goes to who’s manning the grill.
  22. A slice of picanha dipped in farofa

When talking about the flavors of churrasco, I think the real magic happens on the plate.  With other types of cooking the magic happens perhaps in the mixer or the fry pan or the oven.  A piece of superior quality meat, from a well-raised animal, grilled to perfection is a beautiful thing.  But more than four bites of the same thing, even a beautiful thing, can get boring.  With churrasco, a piece of picanha or other cut grilled to reveal all its inner lusciousness, meets its best friends in the playground that is your plate.  It finds farofa, the crunchy absorption master made of manioc meal toasted in bacon fat.  Think crispy-nutty grits that nab runaway meat juices. Its other best friend is molho à campanha, a kind of vinegary salsa of tomatoes, onions and sometimes bell peppers, that adds freshness and its own tangy juiciness to the mix.  These three make a beautiful mess in your plate.  Meat slices become encrusted in the molho à campanha-soaked farofa, silverware is forgotten, fingers get licked.  This experience is what makes churrasco truly unique.

See Also

I make a corrupted version of this great triumvirate.  Instead of a traditional molho à campanha, I make a salsa of tomatoes, mango, onions, cilantro, lime juice and jalapeños.  Even after 13 years of living in Brazil I can’t shake my California roots.  Sometimes we even make tortillas.  What’s shocking is that there are quite a few of my friends here that now serve this salsa with their churrasco.  Like those Austrian butchers, I guess I’m working on a new version of “authentic”.

*The Wessel family is credited for introducing the picanha to Brazil


View Comments (30)
  • Hi Suzie, wow thank you for this! The technique of cutting of the meat for assar and grehlar is spot on (something that I have seen many brazilian food experts mess up). And ultimately you’re right, the steak can be fantastic, but there is something about the nutty gritty farofa, and the black beans, and the relish, that makes this come together in a way that I have no words for. Obrigado!

  • Hi there. My wife is from Araraquara. I love grilling. We went to visit her family in Brazil in 2007. Her uncle owns a small butcher shop and decided to have a big BBQ for us before we went back home to Florida. I fell in love with picanha and her uncle taught me how to cook it. Even though we had the language barrier, with the most delicious meat in the world we didn’t need many words (our mouths were full). I make some picanha every time I find a place where I can buy it.

    • Hi Derek, I read your review and wanted to give you a heads up, not sure what part of Florida you live in but they sell Picanha in a meat distributor down in Miami and Miramar called Martinez Distributors http://www.mdist.us

  • Thank you so much for your wealth of information. I can’t wait to try this as it is really one of my favorites!

  • Suzie, muito boa matéria, eu morei 11 anos em Montreal e ensinei um açougueiro a corta a Alcatra do meu jeito, portanto tirando minha picanha…rsrsr.
    Infelizmente, NUNCA achei onde eles enfiam a maminha, não vem junto com a peça de alcatra que eles recebem.
    Se vc me permite um pitaco na sua matéria…
    Picanha cortada pra colocar no espeto é coisa de churrascaria pra colocar em fogo alto e servir nas mesas, churrasco em casa, com a tarde toda pra comer e tomar uma gelada, Picanha se assa a peça inteira com fogo lento.
    Afinal como diz o Bassi, churrasco não é só a carne, é a festa em torno da currasqueira

  • I am from South Africa. We were introduced to Picanha by a Brazilian friend in Maputo, Moçambique. In South Africa the cut is called “Flap of Rump”. Congratulations on a well written recipe with mouth watering photos.

  • Always great to get some great tips on brasilian cooking .
    Having come from brasilian roots my mother from Salvador Bahia my father French and my self born in Bahia but raised in Australia since age 5 .
    As l get older l seem to be going back to my roots and finding more and more about my old culture and especialy cooking .
    l have now mastered many dishes from brasil in fact im now a bit of a expert often getting asked to make a certain brasilian dish for friends .
    But the art of cooking picanha is defiantly a art every thing has to be done the correct way .
    your description of how to cook etc is perfect to the point .
    thank you ted

  • Hi Suzie,
    I am from the Netherlands and Picanha is still a ‘forgotten piece of meat’ over here which can not be found frequently. In preparing for a large BBQ tomorrow I was lucky to find a number of wonderfull picanhas which I will prepare for about 100 persons. Thanks for your detailed information which is very helpful.

  • Hello Suzie,
    I discovered picanha in a brazilian distributor in Brussels, Belgium. This delicious beef is produced and comes from Brazil and Uruguay. I have no idea which one is the best for BBQ as I cooked both either on rock salt or sometimes on garlic.
    Yes I agree with you to eat it with black beans but here we love it with home made potato chip or french fry.
    Bravo and merci for the fourteen detailed points with color photos illustrating how to handle the cut, to score and how to cook this juicy picanha.
    Phil

  • Great article, with plenty of tips, technique and historic background.
    Went to the store and bought 2 pieces of 3# each. Can’t wait :)
    Suzie, you are a very talented writer – Obrigado!

  • Hi Suzie !!! Get a tip ! Just pick the full meat, dont cut anything, and cover with rock salt and put on fire ! When the piece turn all grilled take off fire … and now you cut slices about 2 a 3 centimeters … inside wil be red … just use a litle of salt ( rock or refined )and get back to fire just to finalize red or more “dark”. Sorry my english .

  • Checkers supermarkets in South Africa now stock the picanha routinely. Wonderful stuff and staple diet for Banting dieters

  • Here in the states, I make a good imitation of farofa using dry Cream of Wheat in place of the manioc which is unavailable here. I cook finely chopped bacon and onion in an iron skillet, then dump in the Cream of Wheat and toast on the stovetop. Works great!
    I live in Texas, and have never seen picanha here in the stores. I like the rock salt idea!

  • Here in Southwest Louisiana, the piece of meat that is what we would consider to be the picanha is “the top cap of the bottom round”. However, any meat market here in the US should be able to get it for you. They do sell the rump roast anyhow and the picanha is usually the part that is trimmed off to get to the rump roast . The trimmings are usually ground up with other meats here and used to make sausage.

  • I am from Uruguay, I live in Miami now. You put the best words for picanha I had read.

    Only thing you are missing shared with with friends and you will build moments for the rest of your life.

    Thanks for writing this piece.

  • I wanted to add my thanks for this easy to follow guide. I cut up my picanha into steaks and grilled them per your instructions. Perfect! I diced up some garlic and mixed it with the rock salt for the rub.

    I’m thinking that I might try skewering in the traditional half-moon format on my rotisserie rod and cooking it on the grill’s rotisserie. Should work out well. Have any other readers tried this?

  • Hi Suzie,

    I’m grilling a picanha tonight for our 3 adult children & spouses. This is the first time for me, and I was delighted by your article. My memories of living in Rio in the late 70’s as a young man, then again in the late 80’s with my young family, are among the fondest I have. Long lunches at the Porcao or Mariu’s with a good caipirinha before and a lengthy nap after are what your posting brought back to me.

    I’m going to try something a bit different. Grilled picanha, whole, on a covered Weber grill, with a drip pan for the drippings, using the indirect method, with some linguica for starters. What do you think? fvfisher@hotmail.com

  • Can you send me a recipe for their basting sauces? Like their garlic basting sauce for some of their meats and chicken. Thanks.

    • Hi Mike, I am not familiar with any basting sauces as part of traditional churrasco. Traditional churrasco, at least in my experience, employs just rock salt. That is not to say that there aren’t any brazilian cooks out there trying new things. I’ve lived here 18 years and seen a lot of innovative grilling here, but always in the spirit of following another tradition or influence. Thanks for the question.
      – Suzie

  • Just did a 24 hr 55C sous vide. only seasoned with salt and pepper. with a little horseradish mayo with some home fries and peas. Unbelievable. Tender. Flavorful and great texture!

    I have to say that my fortino’s experience has jumped up widely in terms of their butcher shop!

    Give it a try.
    nitrous

  • Thank for these beautifully written instructions and pictures. My butcher now carries this cut (Butcher’s Alley in Bethesda for you D.C. folks) and we grill tonight!

    Thanks again. Mike

  • Thanks so much for these instructions! My husband is from São José dos Campos, but will be grilling picanha for the first time in Canada using these tips. Very helpful – thanks again!

  • Can I grill the picanha slab all at once, THEN cut into steaks from there when ready? Or is it best to first cut into steaks, then grill them individually? Lastly, I know I will be cooking with the fat cap on, but should I remove it when serving as steaks?

    Thanks, Joe

  • We are making our 1st Picanha tonight here in Mid=City West Los Angeles after too many rib eye’s :) I Loooove your article and tips!!!!
    Obrigado!!! Malibu local & Puerto Rican foodie loca :-))

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