![]() | ||
Similar Fabada asturiana, Cabrales cheese, Cecina, Cordon bleu, Flamenquín |
A cachopo is a dish characteristic to Asturian cuisine. It consists of two large veal fillets and includes ham and cheese. The dish is eaten fried and hot after being breaded in eggs and breadcrumbs, and it is usually served garnished with potatoes, peppers, or mushrooms.

The first evidence of the cachopo dish is found with doctor Gaspar Casal, in the early eighteenth century.
There are multiple variables of this dish including fish cachopos, chicken or pork cachopos stuffed with seafood, meat, mushrooms, peppers, cheese, asparagus, etc. In recent years, it is typical to find restaurants in guidebooks that serve cachopos.





References
Cachopo (dish) Wikipedia(Text) CC BY-SA