Restaurants
The best places to eat outdoors in Lisbon
Alfresco dining, Lisbon-style – our pick of the best places to eat outdoors in Lisbon
By Time Out Lisbon editors
Posted: Friday June 24 2016
Lisbon is a city engineered for alfresco eating and drinking, and there are an abundance of places to do just that. So if you're looking for great food and freash air, look no further: these are the best places to eat outdoors in Lisbon.
Restaurants
Atalho Real
Princípe Real
Run by those responsible for the Atalho stall in gourmet market Mercado de Campo de Ourique, this space behind the Embaixada minimall Príncipe Real popped up last summer. In this pleasant patio, meat is king. Star of the show is the huge Destaque para the huge chuletón (rib steak) and the matured entrecôte.
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Restaurants
A Travessa
Estrela/Lapa/Santos
This Luso-Belgian restaurant is in the Convento das Bernardas - a former nunnery that also houses the Museu da Marioneta. Owners Viviane Durieu and António Moita are usually on hand to guide you through a seasonal menu with five dishes each of fish and meat, plus steak cooked several ways. Look out for tamboril flamejado (seared monkfish), raia a vapor (steamed ray), and pernil da pata negra assado (roast shank of black pig). The wine list is exhaustive and there's Belgian beer.
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Restaurants, Portuguese
Bica do Sapato
São Vicente
This large dockside space, dotted with designer furniture, features a main restaurant, a large terrace on the river, and an excellent sushi bar upstairs. Its kitchen is now run by one of Portugal's most admired chefs, Alexandre Silva. The menu might offer the likes of poached John Dory with a lentil and fennel stew or Alentejo presas (pork shoulder) with a dried fig stuffing. There are always vegetarian options and lovely light desserts. There's also a great Sunday brunch outside high summer.
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Restaurants, Argentinian
Café Buenos Aires
Chiado
It's all about the cross-cultural vibe at this evocatively decorated bistro run by an Argentinian and a Portuguese who met in Paris. The steak is good, as are the margaritas, although there isn't much else beyond tartines and salads, and it isn't exactly cheap. But the wine list is decent and the terrace buzzes in summer. Space in the original Buenos Aires is at a premium, but there's now a larger and equally charmingly decorated offshoot round the corer, Café Buenos Aires na Fábrica (Rua do Duque 22).
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Restaurants
Café Lisboa
Chiado
The fourth restaurant opened by José Avillez, in September of 2013, meant two bits of good news: 1) the rehabilitation of the restaurant of the Teatro Nacional de São Carlos opera house, with an esplanade and everything; 2) an outlet for excellent food of a less fancy kind than served down the road in the Cantinho, with steaks, hamburgers, croquettes and pastéis de massa tenra (meat pasties).
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Restaurants
Casanova
São Vicente
This offshoot of Casanostra turns out magnificent pizzas from its huge wood-fired oven. They're all great, from a simple napoletana to the Casanova, laden with cherry tomatoes, rocket and mozzarella di bufala. You can't book, but tables are shared and turnover is fast - diners catch waiters' attention by switching on a red bulb dangling above their table - even on the riverside terrace.
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Restaurants, Portuguese
De Castro
Chiado/Cais do Sodré
Portuguese cuisine with a modern twist' is how chef Miguel Castro e Silva defines what he's about at this, his latest culinary project. This white-painted space is cosy and casual, making it a fun place to dip into snacks such as octopus fillets, duck liver and morcela sausage. Alternatively, go for the menu for two for €40; there's also a range of delicious desserts.
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Restaurants
The Decadente
Bairro Alto
This restaurant on the ground floor of one of Lisbon's new breed of hostels offers interesting dishes made from excellent Portuguese ingredients, whipped up by a capable young chef. The funky decor and vibe help to make it popular with both locals and tourists, so it's worth booking ahead. The back patio is sheltered from sun and wind, and has a retractable roof for when it rains. Of the snacks, the tomato soup and pica pau (marinated strips of beef) are good. This is a nice spot for Sunday brunch, a mid-afternoon snack or a cocktail. On the hostel's roof, the pricier Insólito (closed Mon & Sun) has a breathtaking view across to the castle and a menu that ranges from oysters and carpaccio to sophisticated vegetarian fare. The bar is open from 6pm, the restaurant from 7pm.
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Restaurants
Esperança da Sé
Santa Maria Maior
A good range of thin-crust pizzas, risottos and burgers are served at this little place just below the cathedral - an offshoot of a popular restaurant in the Bairro Alto with a similar name. In summer, they set up a pleasant little terrace across the street next to the cathedral wall.
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Restaurants, Global
Largo
Chiado
Largo's interior, by designer Miguel Câncio Martins, features a gantry and lightbox above the entrance and three giant aquariums with jellyfish. More importantly, the kitchen is overseen by Miguel Castro e Silva, one of Portugal's top chefs. Dishes are prepared just so: Portuguese cod cooked at precisely 80ºC (176ºF) and served with fried breadcrumbs seasoned with wild mint and pennyroyal, say, or roast pork from the Iberian black pig with grilled polenta. The lunchtime executive menu is fantastic value at €18, and there's a good range of gin cocktails (from €7.50). There are smoking and non-smoking areas, plus free Wi-Fi and valet parking. Castro e Silva's talents are also now on display at his De Castro restaurants.
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Restaurants, Seafood
Monte Mar
Cascais
The seafront location, the refined ingredients, and the attention to detail have brought this restaurant huge popularity ... and correspondingly high prices. At the weekend it tends to pack out with families.
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Restaurants, French
La Parisienne Bistrot Français
Chiado
This bistrot is French to its marrow. Fromthe ambience to the music, from the waiting staff to the chef, from the starters to the drinks. Try the foie gras au torchon and boeuf Bourguignon.
Restaurants
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