Classroom lesson · Beef · 🇦🇷 Argentina

Asado - the family BBQ

Not just a meal - a whole afternoon together

Ribs and sausages cooking over an open wood fire at an Argentine asado

Photo · Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

An asado is the Argentine version of a barbecue - but it is also much more than that. It is a long, slow afternoon where a family or a group of friends gather around a wood fire, share food together, and talk for hours. Most Argentine families have an asado at least once a week, usually on a Sunday.

Tell me more

The fire is the most important part. The cook (called the 'asador') lights a wood fire early - sometimes two or three hours before the food goes on. The wood burns down to glowing coals, and only then is the meat slowly grilled over them. Slow cooking, slow eating.

An asado is shared. Everyone helps a little. Someone brings the bread. Someone makes a green sauce called chimichurri - made from parsley, garlic, oil and a splash of vinegar - to drizzle on everything. Someone sets the long table. Children run around. Nobody is in a hurry.

Different parts of Argentina have different asado styles. In the cattle country of the Pampas, the meat is often cooked on a flat metal grill called a 'parrilla'. In Patagonia, where the wind blows hard, asados are often cooked indoors over a fire pit. In the north, more vegetables and corn are mixed in.

An asado is not just food - it is a way of saying 'we have time for each other'. To be invited to someone's asado in Argentina is a real welcome. It means: come and stay for the whole afternoon.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01Why might a meal that lasts a whole afternoon feel different from a meal that lasts 20 minutes?
  2. 02What is a meal that your family eats together that feels special?
  3. 03An asado is meant to be shared - everyone brings something. What jobs would you give people at a class picnic?
Try this

Classroom activity

Plan a 'class asado'. Make a list: who brings what, who lays the table, who picks the music? You don't need a fire - just plan it like one. Could be sandwiches, picnic food, or anything. Then actually do a class lunch on a Friday and see how it feels to do it together.

More about Argentina

Other things that make Argentina special

Want your class to meet Argentina?

Pick Argentinawhen you register and we’ll show you the time-zone feasibility.

Register your classroom