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Porto, Portugal

Pátio 44

CuisineTraditional Cuisine
Executive ChefSimão Soares and Alfonso Ramos
LocationPorto, Portugal
Michelin

A Michelin Bib Gourmand address on Passeio de São Lázaro, Pátio 44 applies modern technique to the Portuguese canon at a price point that sits well below Porto's starred tier. Chefs Simão Soares and Alfonso Ramos built the kitchen around traditional recipes reframed with contemporary precision, producing a short, focused menu where cod, chickpea, and pão de ló anchor the experience. Google reviewers rate it 4.9 across more than 500 submissions.

Pátio 44 restaurant in Porto, Portugal
About

A quiet address that earns a loud reputation

Passeio de São Lázaro is the kind of street that Porto's dining scene runs on: no theatre, no illuminated signage, just a terrace of early nineteenth-century facades doing very little to announce what happens behind them. Pátio 44 occupies number 44 with the same restraint, a simple exterior that gives no indication of the Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition the restaurant has carried since 2025. That gap between presentation and credential is not a quirk; it is, in the broader context of Porto's most respected neighbourhood restaurants, a deliberate stance.

Porto's mid-market dining tier has been under quiet pressure for several years. As €€€€ addresses like Antiqvvm, Blind, Le Monument, and Euskalduna Studio have drawn international attention, the single-€ bracket has often been left to tascas that rely on tradition alone, without the technique to hold a critical eye. Pátio 44 sits in a smaller cohort: restaurants operating at accessible price points while bringing kitchen discipline closer to the fine-dining tier. The Bib Gourmand is the clearest institutional signal for that cohort — Michelin's explicit recognition that cooking quality and value can coexist in the same room.

Traditional Portuguese cooking, applied with precision

The kitchen's approach is built on the Portuguese canon — bacalhau, chickpeas, pão de ló , but the execution draws on modern technique rather than nostalgia. That combination is not automatic. Traditional Portuguese recipes were designed for domestic ovens and long resting times; adapting them to a restaurant kitchen without losing the character of the original requires a specific kind of restraint. Chefs Simão Soares and Alfonso Ramos developed their working method through a previous restaurant collaboration, and that shared history shows in the coherence of a short menu where nothing looks forced.

Cod in its various forms anchors the savoury section. The cod "punheta" served with crunchy rice is a version of a preparation common in the Minho and Trás-os-Montes regions, where the fish is broken by hand rather than cut, then softened in oil and garlic. The textural contrast with the rice suggests deliberate attention to the plate's architecture rather than a straight domestic reproduction. A second cod dish pairs fresh fish with a smooth chickpea purée, a pairing that belongs to a specific tradition of Portuguese legume cookery that pre-dates the current wave of ingredient-led restaurants. For those avoiding fish, a vegetarian option built around tofu and mushrooms with a demi-glace has been noted across multiple reviews for performing above its category expectations.

The dessert that draws the most attention is the pão de ló, the light sponge cake from Ovar and Arouca that has been a set piece of Portuguese baking for centuries. Here it is served warm from the oven alongside goat's cheese ice cream. The pairing is less eccentric than it sounds: pão de ló in its traditional form is almost custardy at the centre, and the sharpness of a cultured dairy fat is a logical counterweight. That kind of decision, knowing the classical form well enough to build a counterpoint from it, is characteristic of kitchens trained in both the tradition and its contemporary possibilities.

Where Pátio 44 sits in Porto's dining picture

Porto's Michelin-recognised restaurants now span several tiers and styles. At the leading, addresses like Casa de Chá da Boa Nova in Leça da Palmeira and The Yeatman in Vila Nova de Gaia hold starred recognition and price accordingly. Further afield, Portugal's starred tier extends to Belcanto in Lisbon, Vila Joya in Albufeira, Ocean in Porches, and Il Gallo d'Oro in Funchal. Pátio 44 operates in a different register, one closer in spirit to the Bib Gourmand philosophy as Michelin frames it: good cooking, generous portions, reasonable prices. Across 517 Google reviews, the restaurant holds a 4.9 rating, a signal of consistency rather than occasional brilliance.

Among Porto's €€ addresses, Oficina and Almeja occupy a comparable price tier, though with different culinary orientations. The traditional-cuisine frame at Pátio 44 positions it as a reference point for the Portuguese kitchen specifically, rather than a broader contemporary European offer. For visitors working through the city's dining options, it represents the kind of address that rewards priority booking: the combination of low price, high rating, and Michelin recognition means tables move quickly, particularly at dinner through the spring and autumn months when Porto's visitor numbers peak.

The restaurant's address on Passeio de São Lázaro places it in the São Lázaro garden district, a neighbourhood that sits between the denser commercial activity of Bolhão and the quieter residential streets above the Douro. It is walkable from most central Porto accommodation. For those planning a broader stay in the city, the EP Club Porto hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide provide the supporting context, and the full Porto restaurants guide maps the city's broader dining picture. For comparable traditional-cuisine addresses elsewhere in Europe, Auberge Grand'Maison in Mûr-de-Bretagne and Auga in Gijón offer useful reference points for the category.

Planning your visit

Pátio 44 is located at Passeio de São Lázaro 44, 4000-507 Porto. The single-€ price range makes it one of the more accessible Michelin-recognised addresses in the city; expect a full meal for two to land well below the threshold of Porto's starred-tier restaurants. Given the 4.9 Google rating across more than 500 reviews and the Bib Gourmand profile, reservations are advisable, particularly for weekend evenings. Contact details are not currently listed publicly; checking directly with the restaurant on arrival or through local booking channels is the practical approach.

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