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Lisbon
Checklist
Tins to take home:
Look for the myriad
tinned fish pâtés from
brands like Minerva:
sardine and chile,
smoked salmon, and
spiced mackerel.
Stay on the central
Avenida: Hotel
Valverde’s elegant
rooms are a mash-
up of modern and
antique décor.
valverdehotel.com
The classic that
needs no updating:
Pasteis de nata, a
rich, cinnamon-laced
egg custard that’s
baked into a crispy
tart shell.
Visit this cultural
hub: The LX Factory,
where shops, cafés,
and galleries have
taken over a row of
old warehouses.
Fly direct: TAP offers
nonstop flights to
Lisbon from New York
City and Boston.
Clockwise from left:
Lisbon’s historic
Alfama neighborhood;
Khalid Aziz (right),
owner of the Mozam-
bican Cantinho do
Aziz, with his wife, Jeny
Sulemange, and daugh-
ter Kyarah; a tribute
to fado, the signature
music of Portugal.
outside inf luence, and foreign-born ones are seizing
on local produce and seafood, featuring them in reci-
pes from home.
“People here tend to evaluate food based on mem-
ories of what their grandmothers gave them to eat,”
said the chef, ex-artist, and onetime punk rocker,
Hugo Brito. At Boi Cavalo, the restaurant he opened
nearly three years ago in a tiny former butcher shop
on one of the vertiginously hilly, skinny streets of
Alfama, Brito aims to challenge diners’ expectations
with surprising takes on those traditional ingredi-
ents and grandmotherly dishes.
On my first visit to Boi Cavalo, I ate smoked horse
mackerel placed atop a stiff puddle of alvarinho wine
gelée; and baby razor clams, a Portuguese classic,
served on crispy gyoza filled with acorda, a savory
traditional bread pudding. Every dish was, without
fail, rigorously interesting, every plate a combina-