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A former horse stable on Rua do Secador, Cavalariça holds two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024, 2025) for contemporary cooking that draws its character from the Alentejo coast. Sharing plates built around regional ingredients — cured meat croquettes with clam mayonnaise, grilled brioche with chicken liver parfait — make it the most considered kitchen in Comporta's small but growing restaurant scene.

A Stable Repurposed, a Region Reassessed
The agricultural buildings along Rua do Secador in Comporta were not designed with dinner in mind. For generations, the low-slung structures of this rice-farming village housed working equipment and livestock, not kitchens. The conversion of one of those stables into a contemporary restaurant says something specific about how Comporta has changed: the money and attention that arrived here from Lisbon and beyond over the past decade created demand for a style of dining that simply did not exist in the village before. Cavalariça sits at the point where that demand met a serious answer.
The dining room retains the bones of its former life — structural traces that make the space legible as what it was — while operating at a register that aligns it with Michelin-recognised contemporary cooking. The contrast is not decorative irony; it reflects something honest about this part of the Alentejo coast, where the raw and the refined have always coexisted at close quarters.
Where the Ingredients Come From
Setúbal Peninsula and the western edge of the Alentejo are among Portugal's most productive coastal and agricultural zones. The Atlantic waters off Comporta and the Sado estuary yield clams, sea bass, and bivalves that reach kitchens here faster than they reach Lisbon restaurants two hours north. The hinterland supplies cured pork, game, and the kind of produce that rarely travels far enough to appear on menus in major cities. This proximity is the defining material advantage of cooking seriously in Comporta, and it is the lens through which Cavalariça's menu makes most sense.
Contemporary Portuguese cooking at this level , Cavalariça holds Michelin Plates in both 2024 and 2025, the Guide's recognition for kitchens producing food of consistent quality without yet reaching starred territory , has increasingly moved toward formats that foreground ingredient origin over technique display. Sharing plates are the operative structure here, which means a table builds a picture of the region through accumulation rather than through a single linear progression. That format suits the sourcing logic: no single dish has to carry the entire argument, and the kitchen can move between land and sea across the same meal.
The signature dishes on record illustrate the approach directly. Cured meat croquettes with clam mayonnaise and mustard place inland charcuterie and coastal shellfish in the same bite, which is not a fusion conceit so much as an honest map of what this particular stretch of Portugal produces. Grilled brioche with chicken liver parfait and orange chutney operates in a similar register: offal preparations with fruit acidity have a long lineage in Portuguese cooking, here recalibrated for a contemporary shared-plates format. For context on how kitchens at higher price points in Portugal handle comparable ingredient logic, see Belcanto in Lisbon or Casa de Chá da Boa Nova in Leça da Palmeira, both of which hold two Michelin Stars and operate at the €€€€ tier. Cavalariça runs at €€, which represents a meaningful gap in price relative to its peer recognition.
Contemporary Cooking at the Coast: Where Cavalariça Sits
Portugal's recognised contemporary restaurant scene clusters heavily in Lisbon, Porto, and the Algarve. Outside those nodes, Michelin-acknowledged cooking is less common, which makes Comporta a notable case. The village has no starred restaurant as of the 2025 Guide, but Cavalariça's consecutive Plate recognitions place it in a tier that most coastal resort towns in Portugal do not reach. For comparison, the Algarve's two-starred Ocean in Porches and Vila Joya in Albufeira operate at the highest end of a well-established southern coastal dining circuit. Cavalariça operates at a different scale and price point entirely, but the Michelin signal still matters: it marks the kitchen as one producing food with genuine intent rather than resort convenience.
The international influence in the cooking, shaped in part by the chef's time working in England, shows in the structural choices , sharing formats, charcuterie-and-condiment combinations, the brioche-and-parfait construction , rather than in any displacement of local ingredients. The direction is not unusual among Portuguese chefs of this generation; kitchens like Antiqvvm in Porto and A Cozinha in Guimarães have similarly absorbed external technique while remaining anchored to regional product. What distinguishes Cavalariça is doing this in a village with fewer than a thousand permanent residents, where the competitive set is thin and the sourcing geography is immediate.
Comporta's dining scene beyond Cavalariça is worth mapping before you arrive. Sem Porta represents a different point on the local spectrum. For a fuller picture of what to eat, drink, and do in the area, our full Comporta restaurants guide covers the range, and the Comporta bars guide and Comporta wineries guide fill in the rest of the picture. If you're planning where to stay, the Comporta hotels guide and experiences guide are the logical next steps.
Planning a Visit
Cavalariça is at Rua do Secador 9, in the heart of Comporta village. The €€ price range sits well below what comparable Michelin-recognised contemporary cooking costs in Lisbon or the Algarve, which makes it one of the more direct cases for value relative to quality in Portugal's dining scene. Comporta itself is roughly two hours from Lisbon by car, accessible via the A2 motorway with a ferry crossing at Setúbal or a longer drive through the Alentejo interior. The village is small enough that the restaurant is walkable from most accommodation. Booking in advance is advisable, particularly from June through September when the broader Comporta seasonal influx compresses availability across all venues. Specific hours and a direct booking method are not confirmed in our data at the time of writing; checking current availability through a local reservation platform or the restaurant directly is the reliable approach. For contemporary dining at a comparable intent level across Portugal, the references extend to Il Gallo d'Oro in Funchal, The Yeatman in Vila Nova de Gaia, A Ver Tavira in Tavira, and Al Sud in Lagos, each operating in different regional contexts with their own ingredient logic.
Frequently Asked Questions
- What are the signature dishes at Cavalariça?
- The two dishes most associated with the kitchen are cured meat croquettes with clam mayonnaise and mustard, and grilled brioche with chicken liver parfait and orange chutney. Both reflect the menu's core approach: Alentejo-coast ingredients in contemporary shared-plate constructions. The croquette in particular puts inland charcuterie and coastal shellfish in direct conversation, which captures the geography of the region in a single bite.
- What is the leading way to book Cavalariça?
- Confirmed booking details are not in our current data. Given the Michelin Plate recognition in 2024 and 2025 and Comporta's compressed summer season, booking ahead is the practical approach from June through September. A Google rating of 4.3 across 618 reviews suggests consistent demand. Checking directly through the restaurant or a Portuguese reservation platform is the most reliable route; the address is Rua do Secador 9, Comporta.
- What makes Cavalariça worth seeking out in Comporta's restaurant scene?
- Consecutive Michelin Plates in a village this size, at a €€ price point, is a combination that is difficult to find elsewhere on the Portuguese coast. The kitchen holds Michelin recognition typically associated with larger urban dining scenes, but operates with the sourcing advantage of immediate proximity to the Sado estuary and Alentejo agricultural land. For international context on what contemporary sharing-plate formats look like at higher price tiers, César in New York City and Jungsik in Seoul offer useful reference points, but Cavalariça's proposition is specifically rooted in a place and a price bracket that neither of those addresses.
Comparable Spots, Quickly
These are the closest comparables we have in our database for quick context.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cavalariça | Contemporary | €€ | This space, formerly a stable for horses, has been converted into a modern, eleg… | This venue |
| Belcanto | Modern Portugese, Creative | €€€€ | Michelin 2 Star | Modern Portugese, Creative, €€€€ |
| Casa de Chá da Boa Nova | Portugese, Seafood | €€€€ | Michelin 2 Star | Portugese, Seafood, €€€€ |
| Ocean | Contemporary European, Creative | €€€€ | Michelin 2 Star | Contemporary European, Creative, €€€€ |
| 50 seconds from Martin Berasategui | Progressive Spanish | €€€€ | Michelin 1 Star | Progressive Spanish, €€€€ |
| Eleven | Portugese, Creative | €€€€ | Michelin 1 Star | Portugese, Creative, €€€€ |
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