In newly fashionable Cypress Park in Los Angeles; intimate, walk-in-only Barra Santos — surrounded by Mexican eateries and low retailers — quietly flies Portugal’s flag. On the partitions are blue-and-white tiles that evoke the old-world allure of azulejos in Lisbon. And on the menu are old-country highlights, like crispy cod croquettes and meaty bifana sandwiches. For co-owner Mike Santos, whose household hails from each Lisbon and the town of Viseu three hours north, opening Barra Santos in March 2023 comes at a time when People have gotten far more accustomed to his ancestral house.
“Whereas I have been concerned in numerous initiatives, Barra Santos is my first restaurant that’s centered on Portuguese dishes,” he says. “Ten or fifteen years in the past, there simply wasn’t as a lot curiosity in exploring Portuguese delicacies in a devoted approach [in Los Angeles]. Immediately, although, there’s a broader understanding that Portugal has its personal culinary id past the Mediterranean umbrella.”
Because the world turns into extra globalized, beforehand under-represented cuisines in the US are starting to pop up everywhere in the nation. However the well timed progress of Portuguese-inspired eating places may need a extra tangible supply: tourism to Portugal. It’s no secret that the nation has develop into a extra fashionable journey vacation spot lately, however the variety of People heading there may be rising at a large clip. It’s been reported that between January and June 2024 alone, over 1 million folks from the US — double the quantity from 2022 — visited locations like Lisbon, Porto, Douro Valley, and Comporta. And when these People return house, they’re in search of out the meals that they had on trip.
“Many People are coming back from their journeys with a newfound love for Portuguese meals and wine,” Santos says, including that “past tourism, although, I believe it’s a bigger development in eating the place folks desire a extra genuine, immersive expertise with particular regional cuisines — and Portuguese meals, with its contemporary, vibrant, but comforting flavors, matches proper into that.”
On the opposite aspect of the nation in New Jersey, David Viana opened Lita — named after his mom Rosalita — in a strip mall in Aberdeen Township in April 2023. Although the menu as a complete is named fashionable Iberian, Viana’s Portuguese heritage was a large level of reference for many of the dishes, like rissóis de camarão (a sort of fried pastry filled with shrimp) and a garlicky bowl of Amêijoas à Bulhão Pato, or clams cooked in white wine. He says that lately, whereas doing desk rounds on the restaurant, he typically meets diners who’re keen to speak about touring to Portugal.
“I don’t assume per week goes by with out considered one of my visitors having simply returned from Portugal or with out somebody asking for my suggestions about the place to eat in Lisbon or Porto as a result of they only booked a visit,” he admits.
Now whether or not Portugal’s red-hot journey bonafides are fueling a requirement for Portuguese delicacies stateside is tough to show, however it could possibly’t be ignored that there’s a notable uptick in latest openings. 5-star lodge Raffles Boston debuted in September 2023 with first-generation Portuguese American and 2001 F&W Greatest New Chef George Mendes as its govt chef.
On high of overseeing the property’s whole culinary program, he additionally helms the kitchen at Amar, a fine-dining restaurant impressed by Portuguese meals. Mendes, who relies in New York Metropolis, has operated profitable Portuguese venues earlier than, together with Michelin-starred Aldea from 2009-2020, however a luxurious lodge launching a eating room devoted to Portuguese cooking? That’s a a lot rarer proposition, particularly when in comparison with accommodations touting French, Italian, and Japanese eating places.
And on October 23, 2024, Emeril Lagasse opened his first undertaking in New Orleans in eight years: 34 Restaurant & Bar honors the enduring chef’s Portuguese heritage and his late mom Hilda, who was initially from the Azores, an autonomous area of Portugal within the north Atlantic. As an alternative of chunky muffuletta or spice-forward gumbo that Lagasse is legendary for, the menu at 34 promotes comforting dishes like Porco Alentejana, a hearty stew of pork and clams, and arroz pato, a for-the-table platter of rice with duck plus chorizo and lardo.
In Seattle’s Pike Place Market, there’s Lonely Siren. In Chicago, Cadinho serves Portuguese pastries and desserts. Michelin-starred Adega, which shuttered in December 2023, has reopened in its unique area in San Jose, California. And Eleven Madison Park alum Colin Wyatt is about to open seafood-obsessed Douro in Portland, Maine, any day now.
And it’s not simply US-based cooks who’re making their mark on the nationwide eating scene. Even Portuguese cooks are getting in on the motion. In March 2024, Henrique Sá Pessoa, the person behind Lisbon’s two-Michelin-starred mecca Alma, landed in Miami’s Coconut Grove with Sereia, a brilliant, glamorous eating room with an Iberian-inspired menu. To Sá Pessoa, whose eating places may also be present in London and Amsterdam, the expansion of tourism in Portugal has been useful in serving to create this world presence.
“I see the affect of tourism to Portugal firsthand within the eating room and kitchen,” he explains, noting that in Alma, almost half his purchasers are People. “We frequently hear visitors speaking about their favourite dishes and eating places from their journeys, they usually categorical a want to relive these culinary experiences.”
And at Sereia, they’ll look forward to finding plenty of classics: peixinhos da horta (battered and deep-fried inexperienced beans), pica pau (seared strips of beef with pickled veggies), and arroz de carabineiro (a large-format rice dish with scarlet prawns). These are the sorts of dishes that you simply had been more likely to discover in Portuguese communities across the US, like in Newark, NJ, or in Massachusetts.
However in Miami, Sereia may be it. And for Viana, who grew up in New Jersey, this second, although thrilling, is sudden. “I by no means imagined a world the place nice Portuguese eating places would exist from coast to coast,” he says, “particularly when in my youth they had been all confined to at least one metropolis, Newark.”