Cooking Lisbon
Tour
About Cooking Lisbon
Cooking Lisbon operates from a restored 18th-century kitchen in Mouraria where you'll learn to make proper Portuguese dishes like bacalhau à brás, caldo verde, and those tricky pastéis de nata that require serious technique. The four-hour classes cover three courses plus dessert, and you'll actually understand why Portuguese cooking relies so heavily on olive oil, garlic, and patience. Chef André keeps groups small (maximum 12 people) and teaches traditional methods his grandmother used, not Instagram-friendly shortcuts.
You'll start by selecting ingredients at the neighborhood market, then spend most of your time in the atmospheric stone kitchen learning knife skills and proper seasoning. The pace feels relaxed but focused, and André explains the history behind each dish while you cook. The best part comes at the end when you sit down to eat everything you've prepared, paired with three Portuguese wines that actually complement the food instead of just being thrown together.
At €85 per person, it's excellent value compared to similar classes in Chiado that charge €120 for less hands-on time. Skip the weekend sessions if you can, weekday classes have better group dynamics and more personal attention. The pastéis de nata lesson alone is worth the price, most cooking schools skip the custard technique that makes them actually good instead of just acceptable.
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