Google: 5.0 · 13 reviews

Alma occupies an 18th-century building that once served as the warehouse for Bertrand, the world's oldest bookshop, and the history in the walls is more than decorative. Two menus frame the kitchen's output: the Alma tasting menu built around signature dishes, and Costa a Costa, dedicated entirely to Portuguese fish and seafood. It sits among Lisbon's upper tier of fine-dining addresses, with Michelin recognition and a format that rewards guests with time to spend.
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A Warehouse, a Bookshop, and the Weight of Portuguese History
Lisbon's fine-dining addresses often occupy buildings with more past than present, but few carry the specific cultural freight of Alma's setting. The restaurant occupies the former warehouse of the Bertrand bookshop, which opened in 1732 and holds recognition as the world's oldest operating bookshop. That provenance is not incidental: the building's elegant 18th-century façade, the proportions of the space, and the contemporary interior fitted within it all contribute to a dining environment that feels grounded in something larger than the meal itself. Note that Alma has a planned relocation to Rua Artilharia Um — confirm the address before visiting.
This is the broader context that defines Lisbon's current position in European fine dining. The city's top-tier restaurants are not simply borrowing global fine-dining grammar; they are working within a layered national culinary tradition and, in several cases, staging it inside buildings with centuries of civic meaning. Belcanto, in the Chiado, operates within a similar frame. CURA and Eleven approach the same territory from different angles. Alma's specific contribution is a kitchen that treats Portuguese culinary identity as living material rather than museum exhibit.
Two Menus, Two Arguments for Portuguese Cooking
The structure of Alma's offering reflects a considered position on what fine dining in Portugal should do. The restaurant runs two menus in parallel. The Alma menu is built around the kitchen's signature dishes, a through-line of refined technique applied to Portuguese ingredients and flavour logic. The Costa a Costa menu takes a more focused argument: it dedicates itself entirely to Portuguese fish and seafood, positioning the country's Atlantic coastline as a culinary subject in its own right.
Portugal's relationship with its coastline is not a peripheral detail of the national kitchen; it is the organizing principle. Bacalhau alone generates hundreds of documented preparations. The broader category of fresh coastal fish, shellfish, and crustaceans runs through everyday cooking and into the country's most serious restaurant menus. What Costa a Costa proposes is that this tradition is substantial enough to anchor a complete fine-dining experience, from first course to last. Dishes from the kitchen include Portuguese-style baked mullet with grilled sea lettuce and sour pepper, and scarlet shrimp with pumpkin, harissa, and black garlic. The latter is a useful illustration of how the kitchen operates: coastal produce meets North African spice reference, but the logic is Portuguese rather than fusion.
The lamb course with red cabbage migas and smoked aubergine points toward the inland tradition, the other pillar of the national table, and signals that the Alma menu ranges more widely across the country's food culture.
For comparable treatments of Portuguese seafood at a high level elsewhere in the country, Casa de Chá da Boa Nova in Leça da Palmeira and Ocean in Porches represent the regional poles of the same conversation. Internationally, Le Bernardin in New York City demonstrates how a seafood-only format can sustain a multi-decade fine-dining argument — a useful benchmark for what Costa a Costa is attempting within the Portuguese context.
Alma in Lisbon's Fine-Dining Tier
Lisbon now operates a distinct upper bracket of fine-dining restaurants, and Alma sits within it. The city's high-end restaurant scene has developed quickly over the past decade, moving from a handful of internationally recognised addresses to a broader cohort with Michelin recognition, sophisticated wine programs, and the infrastructure , sourcing networks, trained front-of-house teams, skilled sommeliers , that serious tasting-menu restaurants require.
Within that cohort, Alma's peer set includes Belcanto, CURA, and Eleven , all operating at the €€€€ price tier and all engaged with modern Portuguese cuisine at different points on the innovation spectrum. 50 Seconds from Martin Berasategui and 2Monkeys extend the city's creative dining options beyond the strictly Portuguese frame. Alma's distinction within this group is the dual-menu architecture and the explicit seafood focus of Costa a Costa, which gives the restaurant a specific identity rather than a general fine-dining one.
At the national level, the comparison set widens. Vila Joya in Albufeira, Antiqvvm in Porto, The Yeatman in Vila Nova de Gaia, and Il Gallo d'Oro in Funchal represent the geographic spread of Portugal's Michelin-level dining. Alma operates in the capital, which means it draws the broadest international audience and functions as many visitors' single point of contact with serious Portuguese cooking.
The Service Dynamic
Fine dining in Portugal, at this level, tends toward formality without stiffness , a mode that fits the national temperament better than the cooler, more theatrical service styles that became fashionable in Nordic and some British restaurant rooms. At Alma, the kitchen's presence extends into the dining room: the chef is a frequent visitor to the floor, participating in service directly. This is not unusual in restaurants of this type , similar presence is documented at several of the country's other leading addresses , but it reinforces the sense that the cooking has a point of view that the team wants to communicate, not just deliver.
The room itself is contemporary in finish but not stripped of character. The 18th-century structure provides proportions and a sense of material age that newer restaurant interiors rarely achieve regardless of design budget. The combined effect is a space where the meal feels situated rather than suspended.
Planning Your Visit
Alma occupies the address at Travessa da Légua De Póvoa 11, Corpo 3, Bloco B, Loja L in Lisbon, though a planned relocation to Rua Artilharia Um is noted, and confirming the current address directly before booking is advisable. The restaurant operates at the €€€€ price tier, consistent with Lisbon's leading fine-dining cohort. Given the dual-menu structure, it is worth deciding in advance whether the full-range Alma menu or the seafood-focused Costa a Costa better fits your preference , the two are distinct enough that the choice shapes the evening significantly. Reservations at this level of Lisbon dining typically require advance planning, particularly for weekend services; booking several weeks ahead is a reasonable minimum.
For broader orientation, EP Club's full Lisbon restaurants guide maps the city's dining tiers in detail. Visitors building a longer stay will find useful coverage in the Lisbon hotels guide, the bars guide, the wineries guide, and the experiences guide. For a comparable chef-driven model with a similarly strong sense of national identity in a different register, Emeril's in New Orleans offers an instructive parallel: a chef whose name anchors a restaurant deeply embedded in a specific regional culinary tradition.
A Pricing-First Comparison
A short peer set to help you calibrate price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Henrique Sá Pessoa | (Planned relocation to Rua Artilharia Um, nº51 - bloco B - Loja L) Alma is one o… | This venue | |
| Belcanto | €€€€ | Michelin 2 Star | Modern Portugese, Creative, €€€€ |
| 50 seconds from Martin Berasategui | €€€€ | Michelin 1 Star | Progressive Spanish, €€€€ |
| CURA | €€€€ | Michelin 1 Star | Modern Portugese, Modern Cuisine, €€€€ |
| Eleven | €€€€ | Michelin 1 Star | Portugese, Creative, €€€€ |
| Feitoria | €€€€ | Michelin 1 Star | Modern Cuisine, €€€€ |
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