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    Restaurant in Porto, Portugal

    Almeja

    340pts

    Seasonal Portuguese cooking, easy to book.

    Almeja, Restaurant in Porto

    About Almeja

    Almeja is one of Porto's better-value contemporary Portuguese restaurants — a Michelin Plate-recognised kitchen at €€ pricing with a 10-course tasting menu and weekday lunch options that give you real flexibility. Chef João Cura's seasonal approach and a 4.5 Google rating across 763 reviews make this an easy recommendation, especially for a mid-week lunch near Bolhão.

    Should You Book Almeja?

    Getting a table at Almeja is easier than it deserves to be. Bookings are generally available without weeks of advance planning, which is unusual for a Michelin Plate-recognised restaurant in a city where the better contemporary Portuguese spots fill up fast. If you have been waiting for a reason to try it, that is your opening — take it. Chef João Cura's seasonal kitchen at Rua de Fernandes Tomás 819 is one of the more considered mid-price dining options in Porto right now, and the €€ price point puts it well below the city's top-tier tasting menu rooms.

    The Room and the Setting

    Almeja occupies a building that previously served as a traditional coffee and tea shop on the edge of Bolhão — the market district that also lends its name to one of the restaurant's weekday menus. The space carries the quiet weight of that history without leaning on it. There is a garden, and it is the seat you want on a warm evening or a clear lunchtime. The outdoor area adds a sense of ease to what is otherwise a focused, considered room. It is not a large, buzzing space designed for group celebrations; it reads as intimate and deliberate, which suits solo diners and couples better than large parties.

    Lunch vs. Dinner at Almeja , Which Is Worth Your Time?

    This is the most practically useful question to answer for anyone planning a visit, and the answer depends on what you are after. Lunch runs from 12:30 to 2:30 pm on Tuesday through Saturday, and dinner from 7:30 to 10:30 pm. Monday and Sunday are closed, so plan accordingly.

    Lunch is the stronger value play. The Bolhão and Trindade menus , named for landmarks in the immediate neighbourhood , are available only on weekdays, and they represent a more accessible entry point into Cura's cooking than the full 10-course tasting menu. If you are visiting Porto mid-week and want a serious lunch without committing to a long tasting format, this is where Almeja makes the most sense. The weekday lunch menus give you the kitchen's seasonal sensibility at a lower commitment level, both in time and almost certainly in price relative to the full tasting experience.

    Dinner is the format for the full expression of what Almeja is. The 10-course tasting menu is the main event, and it is how the restaurant earns its Michelin recognition. The à la carte option exists at dinner too, which gives you flexibility if a 10-course format does not fit your evening. That said, the tasting menu is the reason this kitchen has been cited by Michelin two years running , 2024 and 2025 both earned Plate recognition , so if you are coming specifically to assess the cooking, committing to the full menu is the right call.

    The practical implication: first-time visitors who are curious but not certain should book a weekday lunch. Repeat visitors, or those who have already decided they want the full experience, should come for dinner and go with the tasting menu.

    The Cooking

    João Cura built his experience in prestigious restaurants in Spain before returning to Porto with his wife, Sofia Amaral, who manages the dining room. The concept is grounded in seasonal sourcing from local producers, with the menu shaped by what is freshest rather than locked into a fixed format. That approach is reflected in the Michelin commentary, which notes that while not all dishes are vegetable-forward, the plant-based preparations are strong enough that they could justifiably take up more space on the menu. The overall read from that assessment: a kitchen that knows its products and exercises genuine judgement about when to combine flavours, rather than defaulting to formula.

    Signature dishes are not confirmed in available data, so ordering guidance here has to stay general: follow the seasonal menu logic rather than hunting for specific dishes. If the kitchen's focus is on local and fresh, the menu you see on the day of your visit will reflect what is actually good right now , that is the point.

    Booking and Practical Details

    Almeja is rated 4.5 out of 5 across 763 Google reviews, which is a strong signal of consistent execution rather than occasional brilliance. Booking is classified as easy, meaning you are unlikely to be locked out with a few days' notice , though weekday lunches may fill more quickly than they appear, given the appeal of the shorter menus. The restaurant is closed Monday and Sunday. There is no dress code on record, but the price point and setting suggest smart casual is appropriate: not a jeans-and-trainers room, but not a jacket-required room either.

    For context on how Almeja sits within Portugal's broader dining conversation: the country's highest-profile restaurants , Belcanto in Lisbon, Casa de Chá da Boa Nova in Leça da Palmeira, The Yeatman in Vila Nova de Gaia, Vila Joya in Albufeira, and Ocean in Porches , occupy a different tier in both price and formal recognition. Almeja is not competing with that tier. It is competing with Porto's growing mid-range contemporary scene, and within that set it holds its position well.

    For further context on where to eat, stay, and drink in Porto, see our full Porto restaurants guide, our full Porto hotels guide, our full Porto bars guide, our full Porto wineries guide, and our full Porto experiences guide.

    FAQs: Almeja, Porto

    • What should a first-timer know about Almeja? Book a weekday lunch if you want the most accessible entry point. The Bolhão and Trindade menus are weekday-only and give you a structured taste of the seasonal kitchen at the €€ price level without committing to 10 courses. Almeja has held a Michelin Plate in both 2024 and 2025 and scores 4.5 from over 700 Google reviews, so the cooking is consistent. The restaurant is closed Monday and Sunday , confirm before you plan your Porto itinerary around it.
    • Can I eat at the bar at Almeja? No confirmed bar seating is on record for Almeja. The space includes a garden, which is the more desirable casual seating option. If bar dining is important to you, check directly with the restaurant before booking.
    • Is Almeja good for solo dining? Yes, with some caveats. The room reads as intimate rather than large-group-focused, and the à la carte option at dinner means you are not locked into a long tasting format if you are eating alone. The garden seating adds a relaxed dimension that suits solo visitors. Porto's €€ price tier makes it a sensible solo lunch stop without a significant financial commitment.
    • Is lunch or dinner better at Almeja? Lunch is better value; dinner is the fuller experience. The weekday-only Bolhão and Trindade lunch menus are the strongest argument for a daytime visit. Dinner with the 10-course tasting menu is where the Michelin Plate recognition is earned. Choose lunch if you are curious and time-limited; choose dinner if you want the complete picture of what this kitchen can do.
    • What are alternatives to Almeja in Porto? For a step up in formality and price, Euskalduna Studio and Antiqvvm are the Porto restaurants with stronger Michelin standing and a €€€€ price tag to match. Le Monument and Vila Foz offer contemporary cooking in a grander setting at the same higher price tier. If you want to spend less and eat more traditionally, Blind is worth considering. Almeja sits in a useful middle ground: more ambitious than a casual neighbourhood restaurant, less expensive than the city's tasting menu flagships.
    • Can Almeja accommodate groups? The room is not described as large, and the intimate, garden-centred setting suggests it is better suited to parties of two to four than large groups. If you are planning a group booking, contact the restaurant directly , no phone number is publicly listed, so approach via reservation platform or email. Groups of six or more should confirm availability and format options before planning around it.
    • What should I order at Almeja? No specific dishes can be confirmed given the seasonal menu structure. The 10-course tasting menu is the format the Michelin Plate assessment is based on, so that is the safest ordering decision if you want to see the kitchen at full stretch. The Bolhão and Trindade menus at weekday lunch are the alternative for a shorter, more relaxed meal. Michelin's own notes flag the vegetable-focused dishes as a particular strength , worth keeping in mind if the seasonal menu offers that direction.
    • What should I wear to Almeja? No formal dress code is confirmed. At the €€ price point with a Michelin Plate and a seasonal tasting menu format, smart casual is the safe call: neat, considered, not formal. The garden setting softens the tone slightly compared to Porto's €€€€ tasting rooms like Euskalduna Studio or Antiqvvm, where the room itself signals a higher register.

    Compare Almeja

    Almeja in Context: Awards and Value
    VenueAwardsPriceValue
    AlmejaIt’s housed in a building that used to be a traditional coffee and tea shop on the outskirts of Bolhão (the place that gives its name to one of its executive menus). Chef João Cura, after gaining experience in prestigious restaurants in Spain, decided to embark on his own project alongside his wife, Sofia Amaral — who runs the dining room. The concept is grounded in seasonal cuisine and, before designing the menu, the freshest products are selected from local producers. Originality and flavour abound in the chef’s signature creations, which can be enjoyed as a 10-course tasting menu, the Bolhão and Trindade menus (available only on weekdays), or à la carte options. Enjoy the experience in the garden — it’s charming!; This seasonal cuisine is not always based on vegetable ingredients, but those dishes where it does happen are also very good. As far as we are concerned, they could even be present in the menu in greater numbers. Chef Joao Cura knows the local products, knows his trade and knows when it is best to bring flavours together. Wondering if his passion for nature can get him more radishes in the future?; Michelin Plate (2025); Michelin Plate (2024)€€
    Euskalduna StudioMichelin 1 Star€€€€
    Pedro Lemos€€€€
    AntiqvvmMichelin 2 Star€€€€
    Le MonumentMichelin 1 Star€€€€
    Pátio 44

    How Almeja stacks up against the competition.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should a first-timer know about Almeja?

    Almeja operates on a seasonal, product-led philosophy: chef João Cura selects the freshest local produce before designing the menu, so what you eat reflects what is available that week. The format offers a 10-course tasting menu alongside the shorter Bolhão and Trindade menus on weekdays, plus à la carte. At €€ pricing with a Michelin Plate (2025), this is one of Porto's more approachable entry points into serious contemporary Portuguese cooking. Book a few days ahead rather than same-day to secure your preferred session.

    Can I eat at the bar at Almeja?

    Bar seating is not documented in Almeja's venue record. The dining room is managed by Sofia Amaral and the space includes a garden, which is worth requesting when you book. If counter or bar dining is a priority, confirm directly with the restaurant before your visit.

    Is Almeja good for solo dining?

    Yes, and arguably better for solos than many comparable Porto restaurants. The à la carte option gives you full control over pacing and spend without committing to a long tasting format, and the room is run by Sofia Amaral with the kind of floor management that makes single covers feel welcome rather than awkward. At €€, the financial commitment is low enough that a solo visit carries little risk.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Almeja?

    Lunch is the more practical choice if you want the Bolhão or Trindade menus, which are only available on weekdays between 12:30 and 2:30 pm. Dinner runs the same hours (7:30–10:30 pm Tuesday through Saturday) and gives access to the full 10-course tasting menu. If you are visiting midweek and want a shorter, lower-commitment format, lunch wins. For the full João Cura experience, dinner and the 10-course menu is the better call.

    What are alternatives to Almeja in Porto?

    Pedro Lemos holds a Michelin star and represents the step up in price and formality if Almeja leaves you wanting more technical ambition. Antiqvvm also carries Michelin recognition and leans into a more classical Portuguese register. Euskalduna Studio is the right comparison if you prefer a chef's counter format with a strong tasting menu focus. For something less committed, Pátio 44 is a reasonable casual fallback in the city centre.

    Can Almeja accommodate groups?

    Groups are not explicitly addressed in Almeja's venue record. The restaurant is a converted coffee and tea shop, which typically means a modest room without large private dining infrastructure. Parties of four to six should be manageable with advance notice; larger groups should check the venue's official channels to confirm capacity and whether the garden can be reserved.

    What should I order at Almeja?

    Specific dishes are not listed in available venue data and the menu changes seasonally, so any named recommendations would be outdated by the time you visit. The standing guidance from Michelin's own notes is that the vegetable-forward dishes are particularly worth eating when they appear. The 10-course tasting menu is the most complete way to see what Cura is working with in a given season.

    Hours

    Monday
    Closed
    Tuesday
    12:30–2:30 pm, 7:30–10:30 pm
    Wednesday
    12:30–2:30 pm, 7:30–10:30 pm
    Thursday
    12:30–2:30 pm, 7:30–10:30 pm
    Friday
    12:30–2:30 pm, 7:30–10:30 pm
    Saturday
    12:30–2:30 pm, 7:30–10:30 pm
    Sunday
    Closed

    Recognized By

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