Gastronomy
Alentejo GastronomyIberian Black Pig Ham |
Wines
Traditional Wines from Alentejo“Talha” (amphora) Wines |
Architectural Heritage
ChurchMonsaraz |
Culture
The “Cante Alentejano”“Cante Alentejano” Choir |
Landscape
Dão LandscapeMoutain Range Landscape |
Wines
Dão WinesElegance and Charisma |
Gastronomy
Dão GastronomyViseu Style Stew |
Meat has a central place in the region cuisine. Here we may find “rojões” (fried pork belly), “rancho à moda de Viseu” (Viseu style stew), meat sausages like “morcela”, but also the famous “queijo da serra” (a DOP semi soft sheep cheese from milk of a special local breed of sheep from the mountain range Estrela). |
Landscape
Wines
DouroPort Wine |
Gastronomy
Douro CuisineBísaro Pork |
The meat dishes are central in the gastronomy of the region -“Bisaro” pork (local breed), lamb, veal, ham and meat sausages are some examples. But there are seafood dishes as well, like the dry and salted codfish and the salted octopus. To complement, the fruits of the region, in its different formats: mountain olive oil, chestnuts, almonds and figs. |
Landscape
Wines
Lisbon WinesVinyard |
Landscape
Tejo LandscapeAgricultural Plain |
Traditions
Wines
Tejo Wine Region (Bairro)Quinta Vale de Fornos |
This is one of the oldest wine regions in the country. It is divided in 3 areas: “Campo” (fertile plains along the river Tejo), “Charneca” (hotter area bordering Alentejo) and Bairro (hilly area bordering the Lisbon wine region). The Charneca and Bairro, particularly the more mountain like areas, give wines with greater quality and complexity. |
Gastronomy
The products produced in the region end up to be the main ingredients in local dishes. Consequently, rice is widely present, as much as tomatoes, beef and baby goat meat. The melons from Almeirim are famous. But, from all the dishes, probably the “Sopa da Pedra” (Stone Soup) is the most famous. This is a simple and rustic soup, that most probably became famous because of its tale, that is as funny as reveling of the deep human nature. The tale tells a story of a monk that was starving and had no money and could find no help. So, he decided to knock at a door asking for a pan and some water, since he would like to do a stone soup. People were so surprised that they could not believe that someone would be eating a soup made of stone and were eager to watch it. They were so intrigued that they have supplied the pan and the water. But as the water was heating with a big stone in the middle, the monk started asking for ingredients to complement the dish. First, asked for salt and some olive oil, then asked for more ingredients to complement, like potatoes, sausage, cabbage, and many others. By the end, the monk made a soup full of ingredients and flavors. He eats up the soup with enormous pleasure, leaving the stone in the bottom of the pan, for the surprise of all those that were laughing during the process with the expectation of seeing the monk eating the stone. |
Tejo Gastronomy
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Landscape
Wines
Vinhos VerdesAlvarinho |
Gastronomy
Minho CuisineLampreia |
In the crossover between the Atlantic ocean, the Douro and Galiza in Spain, the Vinhos Verdes wine region is rich in fish and meat dishes. The emblematic “sarrabulho” (meat stew with seasoned blood sauce), roasted kid in wood oven and “lampreia” (season river fish baked in a blood sauce). |
Landscape
Algarve Landscape |
Gastronomy
Fish and shellfish are kings in Algarve, as proved by the famous “cataplana” (a fish and clams stew, cooked in a tomato, onion and peppers sauce, in a special copper looking shell pan). If the sweet oranges from Algarve are consumed plain, almonds, figs and carob (“alfarroba”) are used to create multiple dessert dishes, as the almond and eggs pie, the carob pie, or the well known “dom rodrigo” (a dessert made based on eggs, sugar and almonds, rapped in colorful metal looking paper) and the “maçapão” cakes (almonds and sugar hard dough on the outside painted in colorful colors, with soft eggs and almonds dough inside). |
Alfarroba
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Wines
Lagoa Reserva
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The wines from Algarve are difficult to find outside the region, even in Portugal. The productions are typically small and the consumption most made within Algarve by the residents and tourists. The native Portuguese red grapes Castelão and Negra Mole and the white grapes Arinto and Siria are commonly used in the wines from Algarve. |
Heritage
The houses painted in white with details in bright colours (blues and yellows), with terraces used to dry fruit and fish, topped with the traditional local chimneys are typical in Algarve. The old chimneys pictured the individuality of its owner, as much as their wealth, in a way that there were not two chimneys alike. Castles and fortresses are a landmark of the architectonic heritage of Algarve, as shown by the good examples of the Sagres Fortress, Silves Castle, Lagos Walls or the Old Castle of Castro Marim, among many others. |
Chimmeys in Algarve
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Landscape
Goat in a granite mountain
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Gastronomy
Deeply rooted in the mountains, distant from the sea, the region brings to the table all the sensations of the mountain range. From the meat, heavily seasoned, cooked slowly in wood ovens, to the local smoked sausages, the artisanal bread, the goat and sheep cheeses, and, of course, the traditional eggs, flour, sugar and milk-based desserts, particularly the conventual sweets. |
Codfish cake filled with the traditional “Queijo da Serra” (sheep cheese from Serra da Estrela mountain range) |
Wines
Convento de Marialva Red Wine
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The wines from Beira Interior are known by its freshness and elegance, particularly those from high altitude. The red varietals Tinta Roriz, Bastardo, Marufo, Rufete and Touriga Nacional, and the White varietals Síria, Malvasia Fina, Arinto and Rabo de Ovelha are typical in the region. It is yet a region to be discovered, despite not having yet achieved the awareness and reputation of other regions, its wines may easily rival with most of the great wines in the country. |
Landscape
Pico Island, one of the 9 Azores Islands |
Gastronomy
Fish and shellfish are abundant in Azores. The “lapas”, “cracas” and “cavaco” (different kinds of shellfish) are famous, as it is the local tuna fish. The tuna is very appreciated abroad, being exported as far as Japan. But meat is also big in the islands, appreciate in the regional beef dish, but also in the “cozido das furnas” – a stew made buried in the ground and naturally cooked with the warmth of the volcanic lands. At the table we commonly find the “bolo lêvedo”, a kind of sweet bread, originated from the village of Furnas in the island of São Miguel, that may be consumed plain, with butter or jam. The pineapple of Azores is very sweet, being the primary ingredient of the traditional pineapple cake of São Miguel. |
Cozido das Furnas
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Wines
Eruptio Wines
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Pico is one of the nine islands of volcanic origin that make up the Azores Archipelago. It is from Pico that the most famous wines from Azores are made. Despite being millenary, Pico is considered a young island and its soils have not yet been eroded. The vine is planted directly in the crevices of the bedrock at the base of the volcano and next to the sea, receiving a fusion of rain and sea water. They are heroic vines, exposed to the moods of the climate and the tides. To protect them, man uses the island’s own basalt to build stone corrals, creating a labyrinthine landscape that stretches across an almost surreal landscape. This 500-year-old human craft was classified as a World Heritage Site by UNESCO in 2004.
Despite the reputation of the traditional Azores fortified wines, the still volcanic wines are the ones that currently delight the most decerning wine lovers worldwide. |


The locally called “festa brava” (wild feast) is intimatelly linked to the traditions of the region. The bull, the horse and the “campino” (bull keeper boy) are emblematic images of the region.

The houses painted in white with details in bright colours (blues and yellows), with terraces used to dry fruit and fish, topped with the traditional local chimneys are typical in Algarve. The old chimneys pictured the individuality of its owner, as much as their wealth, in a way that there were not two chimneys alike. Castles and fortresses are a landmark of the architectonic heritage of Algarve, as shown by the good examples of the Sagres Fortress, Silves Castle, Lagos Walls or the Old Castle of Castro Marim, among many others.
