A bread soup made with coriander, garlic, olive oil, and poached eggs, served with hot broth poured over. 1)
Dogfish soup with garlic, coriander, and vinegar, traditionally eaten during winter and Lent. 2)
Fried bread paste mixed with olive oil, garlic, and often asparagus or pork drippings, served with grilled meats. 3)
Lamb stew slow-cooked with bread, mint, and white wine for a fragrant and tender dish. 4)
Grilled or stewed Iberian black pork, famous for its rich, nutty flavor. 5)
Wild asparagus bread migas with olive oil and garlic, served with cured pork or eggs. 6)
Pork tenderloin with potato migas flavored with paprika and bay leaf. 7)
Salt cod bread soup with garlic, olive oil, and poached eggs, a fisherman’s adaptation of the classic açorda. 8)
Chickpea stew with pork, sausages, and sometimes lamb, simmered with mint and coriander. 9)
A sheep’s milk cheese with a slightly spicy and tangy taste, often enjoyed with bread and red wine. 10)
A soft cinnamon egg pudding served with syrupy Elvas plums. 11)
A rich conventual sweet made from egg yolks, sugar, and cinnamon, baked until just set. 12)
A luxurious almond and egg sweet with a filling of gila (fig-leaf gourd) jam, originally from Évora’s convents. 13)
A dense “rotten cake” made with pork lard, cinnamon, and sugar, the name being more playful than literal. 14)
Rustic bread drizzled with freshly pressed olive oil, garlic, and sea salt, eaten during olive harvest season. 15)