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Almancil, Portugal

Gusto by Heinz Beck

CuisineMediterranean Cuisine
LocationAlmancil, Portugal
Michelin

Gusto by Heinz Beck holds a Michelin star at the Conrad Algarve in Almancil, presenting Mediterranean and Italian-influenced cuisine through à la carte and two tasting menus of seven or nine courses. The kitchen operates under the creative direction of Heinz Beck, the three-Michelin-starred chef behind La Pergola in Rome. Dinner service runs Tuesday through Saturday from 7 PM, with wine pairing available across both tasting formats.

Gusto by Heinz Beck restaurant in Almancil, Portugal
About

A Dining Room With Its Own Coordinates

The Algarve's fine-dining scene divides more cleanly than its sun-and-golf reputation suggests. On one side sit the casual seafood houses that line the coast from Olhão to Sagres. On the other, a smaller tier of destination restaurants has built a case for the region as a serious address for Mediterranean cuisine at the highest technical level. That upper tier is small. Ocean in Porches anchors one end of it; Vila Joya in Albufeira holds its own distinguished position; and Gusto by Heinz Beck, set within the Conrad Algarve complex outside Almancil, occupies a distinct niche defined by its continental European reference points and a culinary framework that travels from a three-star address in Rome.

The physical approach matters here. Gusto maintains an entrance independent of the hotel it shares a building with, a deliberate architectural signal that this is not a hotel restaurant in the lobby-buffet sense. Guests pass through a private lobby bar before the dining room opens up: contemporary, controlled, and oriented toward a terrace perched above the pool. That separation from the hotel flow is not incidental. It positions the room as a destination in its own right, drawing an audience that may never set foot in the Conrad Algarve's other corridors. For context on where to stay nearby, see our full Almancil hotels guide.

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Mediterranean Through a Continental Lens

Editorial angle on Gusto is not simply that it serves Mediterranean food in a Mediterranean country. The more precise point is that it applies a particular strand of Italian-Mediterranean thinking to an Algarve address. The culinary framework traces to Heinz Beck's three-Michelin-starred La Pergola in Rome, where a longstanding emphasis on what the kitchen describes as "healthy cooking" has given the cuisine its structural logic: restraint in fat, attention to digestibility, and a preference for technique that supports the ingredient rather than transforms it beyond recognition.

That framework shows up clearly in the menu architecture. Gusto offers à la carte alongside two tasting menus, one running seven courses and one extending to nine, with wine pairing available for both. The format is familiar territory for anyone who has dined at comparable addresses: Belcanto in Lisbon, Antiqvvm in Porto, or The Yeatman in Vila Nova de Gaia each deploy a similar architecture. What differentiates Gusto is the Italian thread running through specifically Mediterranean ingredients, a combination that sits at an angle to Portugal's own culinary traditions without dismissing them.

The Fagottelli Carbonara deserves separate mention. It is the signature dish that has followed Beck across his extended network of restaurants: homemade pasta formed into small pouches, filled with carbonara and Pecorino, designed to burst at the table. It is the kind of preparation that communicates a chef's technical ambitions more efficiently than a paragraph of description could. In a region where the dominant idiom is grilled fish and piri piri, a pasta dish of this precision registers as a statement of intent. For Mediterranean cuisine interpreted through a different geographic lens, La Brezza in Ascona and Arnaud Donckele & Maxime Frédéric at Louis Vuitton in Saint-Tropez offer useful comparative contexts from elsewhere in the Mediterranean orbit.

Table Culture and the Sharing Question

The communal small-plates tradition that defines so much of southern European dining does not map directly onto Gusto's format. This is a composed tasting menu environment, where the kitchen controls sequencing and portion scale. That said, the seven- and nine-course structures do encourage a kind of incremental discovery across the table, where conversation about each dish becomes part of the event. The à la carte option gives parties more agency over pacing, and for groups with divergent appetites or budgets, mixing formats at the same table is worth clarifying with the restaurant at booking.

What the format shares with the broader Mediterranean table culture is an unhurried cadence. Dinner service opens at 7 PM Tuesday through Saturday, and the kitchen closes at 10:30 PM, which at tasting menu pace gives the room a rhythm closer to an extended southern European dinner than to a transactional two-hour slot. Sunday and Monday are closed. Almancil's other fine-dining addresses, including Sao Gabriel and the seafood-led 2 Passos, serve as useful comparators for anyone calibrating format and price across an evening in the area. For a more accessible price point in the same town, Pequeno Mundo covers international cooking at a lower spend.

Where Gusto Sits in Portugal's Michelin Map

Portugal's Michelin-recognised restaurant count has grown steadily over the past decade, with Lisbon and Porto concentrating the critical mass of starred addresses. The Algarve holds a smaller but meaningful cluster, and Gusto's 2024 Michelin star places it in that regional tier. The peer set in the south includes Ocean in Porches, which holds two stars, and Vila Joya in Albufeira, which also holds two. Gusto's single star situates it one rung below those addresses in the formal hierarchy, though its connection to a three-star kitchen in Rome gives it a credentialed reference point that most one-star restaurants in the region cannot claim.

Across Portugal more broadly, the starred landscape spans from Casa de Chá da Boa Nova in Leça da Palmeira to Il Gallo d'Oro in Funchal and A Cozinha in Guimarães. Each operates in a distinct regional tradition. Gusto's position is unusual within that national picture: it is the one address in the south where the primary culinary reference is not Portuguese at all, but rather a Roman-Italian lineage applied to Algarve produce. That is either a dissonance or an asset, depending on what the reader is looking for.

A Google review score of 4.8 across 117 reviews suggests the room converts well with the audience it attracts. That audience, travelling to the Algarve primarily for the Conrad's broader offer or for the Quinta do Lago estate nearby, skews international and is generally familiar with tasting menu formats at comparable addresses in London, Paris, or Milan.

Planning a Visit

Gusto by Heinz Beck operates at the €€€€ price point, placing it at the leading of the local spend range. The restaurant is at Estrada da Quinta do Lago, Almancil, accessible by car from the coastal resorts and from Faro airport, which sits roughly 15 kilometres to the east. Dinner runs from 7 PM on Tuesday through Saturday; the kitchen closes at 10:30 PM and the restaurant does not open on Sunday or Monday. Both tasting menus include a wine pairing option, which is worth factoring into the total spend. Booking in advance is advisable, particularly during the Algarve's peak summer season when the Conrad property and Quinta do Lago estate draw significant international traffic. For a broader orientation around the area's food, drink, and leisure options, see our full Almancil restaurants guide, our full Almancil bars guide, our full Almancil wineries guide, and our full Almancil experiences guide.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the signature dish at Gusto by Heinz Beck?
Order the Fagottelli Carbonara. It is the dish that defines Beck's wider kitchen identity: handmade pasta pouches filled with carbonara and Pecorino, built by the same chef who holds three Michelin stars at La Pergola in Rome. At a one-Michelin-starred Mediterranean table in the Algarve, it is the preparation that most precisely communicates what this kitchen is doing differently from its neighbours.
How would you describe the vibe at Gusto by Heinz Beck?
At €€€€ in a region where most fine dining skews relaxed-resort, Gusto reads as the Algarve's most formally composed room. The 2024 Michelin star and the Roman-Italian creative lineage signal a kitchen with continental European references, and the private lobby bar and terrace setting above the pool add a sense of occasion without tipping into stiffness. It sits closer to a destination dinner in a European city than to a holiday treat.
Is Gusto by Heinz Beck child-friendly?
At €€€€ and with a format built around seven- or nine-course tasting menus in Almancil's most formally composed dining room, it is not a practical choice for young children.

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