Discovering Portuguese Desserts

If there is a single image that captures Portuguese baking, it is the pastel de nata — that small, perfect tart of flaky, blistered pastry cradling a custard set with caramelised egg yolk. At Bartolo, we bake them fresh every morning to a recipe that traces its lineage back to the convents of Lisbon, where nuns famously used egg yolks for sweets after the whites had been spent starching their habits.

But the world of Portuguese desserts is far broader than the nata. Step into our display counter on any given morning and you might find pão-de-ló, a sponge cake so rich and yielding it almost trembles when you cut it — ours is finished with truffle olive oil and fleur de sel, a Bartolo twist that honours the tradition while bending it toward the present.

Conventual sweets, modern hands

Many of these recipes belong to a tradition Portuguese pastry chefs call doces conventuais — conventual sweets. They are heavy with eggs, sugar, almonds, and time. The almond tart, the toucinho do céu (literally “bacon from heaven”), the queijadas of Sintra — each carries the fingerprint of a particular region and the patience of a slower era.

We treat these recipes with the same reverence we bring to our breads and our mains. The flavours are bold; the textures are uncompromising. But every dessert that leaves our kitchen is meant to feel like the one your grandmother might have made — if your grandmother had grown up in Lisbon and known exactly when to pull the tart from the oven so the top blistered just so.

Come by in the morning for the warm ones. They taste different straight out of the oven — and we think that’s worth getting out of bed for.

Tradition on Every Plate

Walk into a Portuguese kitchen and you find very few shortcuts. Sauces are reduced, never thickened. Bread is torn, never sliced. The cataplana sits over the flame for as long as the seafood needs, and not a minute less. At Bartolo, we have built a menu around that patience.

Our bitoque — a 200g ribeye finished with the family’s secret bitoque sauce, served over rice and french fries — is exactly the dish you would find in a quiet tasca off a side street in Por
to. Our francesinha takes hours to assemble: ribeye, cured turkey ham, chicken sausage, pepperoni, all layered into bread and drowned in a tomato-and-beer sauce that is closer to alchemy than recipe.

Recipes that travelled

Many of these dishes came to us through grandmothers and aunties who learned them in their own grandmothers’ kitchens. We didn’t invent the cataplana, the bacalhau à brás, the moelas & grapes — we inherited them. Our role is to cook them honestly, with the right ingredients, and to plate them in a way that lets a guest in Kuala Lumpur taste exactly what a guest in Lisbon would taste.

Tradition does not mean rigidity. We use locally caught seafood when it makes the dish better. We adapt portion sizes for sharing, because that is how our guests love to eat here. But the spine of every recipe — the technique, the timing, the soul of it — is unchanged.

That is what we mean by tradition on every plate.

The Culture of Portuguese Dining

To eat the Portuguese way is to surrender your watch at the door. A meal isn’t a transaction; it is a slow, generous opening of plates — one after another — until the table is a small landscape of breads, olives, cured meats, and conversation. We call this style of eating petiscos, and it sits at the heart of what we do at Bartolo.

Petiscos are Portugal’s answer to tapas, but with their own quieter, richer character. A wedge of queijo da serra, sliced almonds, a sliver of presunto. Codfish fritters straight from the fryer. A bowl of moelas — chicken gizzards stewed in tomato — that you scoop up with bread without ever putting your fork down.

The tasca tradition

The Portuguese word tasca describes the kind of place where this culture thrives. A tasca is small, unfussy, family-run. The wine is house wine; the menu changes with the weather; the host is also the cook. There is no pretense and there is no rush. People come to be fed, but also to be among each other.

We built Bartolo with that spirit in mind. The tile work, the warm lighting, the heavy ceramic plates — these are not just decoration; they are an invitation to behave a certain way. Order more than you think you can finish. Stay longer than you planned. Order another coffee. Let the conversation outlast the food.

The Portuguese have a word for that lingering after a meal: sobremesa. It literally means “over the table” — that stretch of conversation when the dishes are cleared but no one wants to leave. We hope you find some of yours here.

How We Craft Every Dish

Most of what makes a dish at Bartolo memorable happens long before it reaches your table. Our breads begin the night before, with sourdough that ferments slowly to develop the depth that makes the crust crackle. Our dips — the romesco, the pesto, the herbed butter — are made fresh in-house, in small batches, every morning.

We don’t buy pre-made stocks. We don’t open jars of sauce. The sangria you drink in the afternoon was steeping in our kitchen at sunrise. The custard for the natas is whisked by hand. These choices add hours to our day, and they are the only reason the food tastes the way it does.

Sourcing matters

We source local where we can and import where we must. Our sardines are cured in-house using a recipe handed down from the Algarve coast. Our beef for the bitoque comes from suppliers we have known for years. The alheira sausage in our brunch — smoked poultry and beef seasoned the traditional way — is one of the few things we still bring in directly from a producer in northern Portugal, because no one else makes it quite right.

Behind every plate is a cook who understands what the dish is supposed to feel like. That can’t be written into a recipe; it has to be taught, shift after shift. Our team trains together, eats together, tastes together. When a new dish goes on the menu, the whole kitchen has tasted it twenty times before a guest ever sees it.

This is the unglamorous, slow work of crafting food we are proud to serve. It is also the reason we look forward to opening every morning.

The Bartolo Wine Experience

Portugal makes some of the most distinctive and underrated wines in the world. Tucked between the Atlantic and the mountains, its vineyards grow grape varieties — Touriga Nacional, Alvarinho, Baga, Encruzado — that you will find almost nowhere else. At Bartolo, our wine list is built to take you on a tour of these regions, one glass at a time.

We start in the north, with Vinho Verde — a young, lightly effervescent white from the Minho region. It is refreshing, low in alcohol, and pairs beautifully with petiscos and seafood. From there we travel south through the Dao and Bairrada regions, whose reds offer bright fruit and surprising elegance.

The Douro and beyond

Our reds are anchored by the Douro Valley, the steep terraced vineyards along the Douro River that produce both Port and some of the world’s most ageworthy table wines. A Douro red made from the same grapes that go into Vintage Port is a thing to behold — deep, structured, layered with dark fruit and subtle spice. It is the wine to drink with our cataplana or our bitoque.

For those who like their wines bigger and bolder, we also pour from the Alentejo, the warm plains of southern Portugal. These wines are sun-soaked, generous, and pair effortlessly with grilled meats and sharing plates.

And for an after-dinner moment, ask about our small selection of Ports — Tawny, Ruby, sometimes a Late Bottled Vintage. A small glass alongside a pastel de nata is one of the simplest pleasures in Portuguese cuisine. We’d love to pour one for you.

The story behind our seafood

Portugal has the longest coastline in continental Europe, and seafood has been at the heart of its cooking for as long as anyone can remember. From the rugged northern fishing villages to the warm waters of the Algarve, every region has its own specialty — and those specialties are the backbone of our menu at Bartolo.

Our most-loved seafood dish is the cataplana — a copper clam-shell pot, sealed shut and set over high heat, that turns mussels, clams, tiger prawns, and grouper into something greater than the sum of its parts. When the lid comes off at your table, the steam carries garlic, white wine, and the unmistakable scent of the sea.

Bacalhau, the national fish

No conversation about Portuguese seafood is complete without bacalhau — salted cod. The Portuguese famously claim to have a different bacalhau recipe for every day of the year, and at Bartolo we serve a few of them: bacalhau à brás, the classic with shredded cod, eggs, matchstick fries, and black olives; the spiritual codfish, baked with carrots in a creamy sauce; and our codfish burger, served on a squid-ink bolo do caco.

We also serve dishes that are quieter on the menu but no less essential. Our housemade canned sardines are cured and marinated in-house using wild-caught fish. Our gambas à guilho — tiger prawns swimming in garlic butter — arrive sizzling, the kind of small dish that turns a meal into an event.

None of this would be possible without good sourcing. We work closely with local suppliers to get fish that is as fresh as the Portuguese coast and as honest as the recipes that have been carrying it for generations.