A perfect example of the Alentejo’s gastro-rustic cuisine is Restaurante a Maria, a small establishment in sleepy Alandroal, where the owner and chef Maria Monteiro serves exquisite local fare in a room decorated to look like a village square. Classics include queijo de Ovelha (an orange-crusted round of gooey sheep’s milk cheese), pato em molho de vinho tinto (duck in red wine sauce) and migas a Alentejana (fried pork with bread soaked in pork fat). Culinary awards plaster the walls near the entrance, and there is a seriousness about the diners that is in keeping with the quality of the food.
Like Maria Monteiro’s unself-conscious fare, many of Alto Alentejo’s Old World charms are served up in a straightforward and unpretentious manner. All of this may change when, in addition to the new highway from Lisbon, a high-speed train between Madrid and Lisbon starts service as expected in 2012, with a stop in Elvas, making Alto Alentejo even more accessible to tourists and weekend house buyers from throughout southwestern Europe.
Excerto de um artigo do NY TIMES
2 comentários:
Parabéns à Maria!!!
... e, se não for pedir muito, dá, por favor um beijinho à Maria e ao Cândido? Obrigado :)
Beijinhos
Foi pena não referirem também o facto de depois de se comer no Restaurante é comum a vila toda saber o que se comeu e bebeu e por vezes até o que se falou.......
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