Portuguese in Miami

  • Detail View
  • List View
  • Grid View

8 results

page 1 of 1

  • Coimbra Restaurant

    4239 W. Flagler St. Coral Gables/S. Miami

    305-446-3633

    Portuguese cuisine is lusty, soulful, rib-sticking fare in which cod - the salted, dried kind called bacalhau - is God. In the wrong hands it can be tough, fishy-tasting stuff. Luckily Coimbra has a good hand with this Portuguese staple and more than a dozen dishes to prove it. Cod fritters are light, crisp, and greaseless; cod sautéed with onions, garlic, potatoes, and hard-cooked egg is satisfying right down to your toenails. Porky chorizo are plump and tasty, and a combo of tender chunks of pork with fat little in-shell clams is downright delicious. Scrape the Hershey's-like sauce off a wedge of cheesecake-dense flan and it's pretty good too.
    2 articles
  • Crazy About You

    1155 Brickell Bay Dr. Brickell

    305-377-4442

    Credit the team at Spanish Grupo La Misión, which brought us Dolores But You Can Call Me Lolita, for the notion of using a goofy, nonfood-related moniker. The same group does it again with Crazy About You, its follow-up venture, but there's another conceptual novelty at work here. It's called great value. The menu is set up much the same prix fixe way as at Dolores-Lolita. About a dozen salads/appetizers are listed on top -- sans pricing, because whichever one you choose will be included with your entrée at no extra charge. The entrées are divided into three pricing options: $15.75, $19.75, and $23.75. Let's say you decide to begin with serrano ham croquettes followed by a mojo-roasted half-chicken with spinach and artichokes. Cost for the two courses is $15.75. Add a glass of house wine for $4 and cappuccino flan for $2.50. Better news still: Those serrano croquettes are ethereally delicious, the chicken is quite taste and generously portioned, and the cappuccino flan is as good as the one you'll pay $8 for anywhere else. Beautiful décor, amiable service, freshly prepared food, and great value -- we're crazy about this place!
    11 articles
  • Fogo De Chao

    836 1st St., Miami Beach South Beach

    305-672-0011

    Let's hark back to the days when meat was served in portions the size of Hyundais. Better yet, let's just mosey on over to Fogo de Chão, which loosely translates to "stuff of the face." Or maybe not â?? our Portuguese isn't so hot â?? but we know a great cut of meat when we eat one. The way it works, as most Miamians know, is a band of servers comes to the table hauling long skewers of fat, juicy meats, and provides continuous slicing privileges for those who want it. There are some 15 Brazilian-style cuts in all, our favorites being the picanha (prime sirloin), beef ancho (prime part of the rib eye), tender pork ribs, pork sausages, leg of lamb... well, guess we like it all. The meats here just seem fresher, moister, and more flavorful than those at other eateries of this type. Diners are likewise lassoed by fresh breads, side dishes, and a ridiculously extensive salad bar. The whole shebang costs $46.50 ($26.50 for kids) â?? not a bad deal when broken down to price per pound.
    8 articles
  • Old Lisbon Restaurant

    2960 NE 199th St. Aventura/North Miami Beach

    305-974-5142

    2 articles
  • Old Lisbon Restaurant

    1698 Coral Way Coral Gables/S. Miami

    305-854-0039

    Old Lisbon opened its doors in January 1991 with an open-kitchen concept and authentic Portuguese cuisine, and it’s been a staple neighborhood restaurant on Coral Way ever since. An open kitchen accents the modern yet rustic dining room, and dishes such as carne de porco a alentejana give diners a chance to taste the unexpected flavors of Portugal so often eclipsed by neighboring Spain. With a wine cellar that features Old World selections, as well as Portuguese beers and exceptional service from the knowledgeable staff, Old Lisbon is here to stay. (Also in South Miami, and, most recently, in Aventura.)
    6 articles
  • Old Lisbon Restaurant

    5837 Sunset Dr., Ste. 203, South Miami Coral Gables/S. Miami

    305-662-7435

    3 articles
  • Sereia

    3540 Main Highway Coconut Grove

    305-967-8152

    You may not think of naming a new kid on the block one of the "best," but Sereia is a rare gem. Lauded Portuguese chef Henrique Sá Pessoa of two Michelin-starred Alma in Lisbon opened Sereia in May with esteemed chef de cuisine Miguel Massens at the helm. In its beautiful and bright dining room, guests are greeted by a serene ambiance with subtle, subliminal nods to the ocean. Sereia does translate as siren, after all, and the dining room does a great job of showcasing that. As beautiful as it may be, however, it's the food you'll be writing home about. Sá Pessoa's bacalhau à brás, a salted cod concoction with shoestring potatoes and egg, is a thing of beauty. And the arroz de pato, a duck rice with smoked bacon chorizo, will have you checking fares to Lisbon.
    3 articles
  • Teixeira Portugal Restaurant

    1569 Sunset Dr., South Miami Coral Gables/S. Miami

    786-717-6749

    There’s good reason why the humble codfish is so prevalent at Teixeira Portugal: The history of Portuguese cuisine, which is represented in Miami in only a handful of restaurants, is filled with off-white fillets of the ubiquitous catch. The heartiness and seemingly endless shelf life of the salted, preserved fish that became the fuel for Europe's exploration and exploitation of the world is served almost a dozen ways at Teixeira. Order it "a nortenha," and a fat, pearly lobe of the fish is deep-fried, lathered in a creamy pumpkin-hued garlic sauce, and sandwiched between two heaps of mashed potatoes. Or opt for it grilled so the skin takes on a smoky char before it's set atop a mound of steamed potatoes twisted up with red peppers, garlic, and caramelized onions. In a pair of stews, the cod is front and center, presented whole. In the caldeirada de bacalhau, sizable hunks of the flaky, firm flesh sit alongside steamed yellow potatoes, all draped in a thin tomato sauce fortified with garlic, olive oil, and just a hint of vinegar. So go ahead, get the stew, the fried cod, the grilled one, and, while you're at it, the cheesy, garlicky concoction called bacalhau com natas just for good measure.
    3 articles