Last Saturday night found us heading into the deep south to celebrate our old pal Esther's birthday at A Torre. We were 7 strong and had taken the precaution of booking a table which was wise as this is a very popular local restaurant.
We arrived at around 7.30pm and the simply furnished room was already full of happy punters knocking back the wine and ordering with gay abandon. With a friendly welcome and a nice laid back atmosphere this is just my kind of place.
We were quickly seated at a large, long table in the middle of the room and after a quick look at the drinks menu we were soon toasting Esther with Sagres and an excellent bottle of very reasonably priced Planalto which was perfectly chilled, dry and aromatic. The wines on offer art A Torre are one of its high points, with a really good but short selection from all of the major wine regions of Portugal; an excellent choice of producers at keen prices ensures that you are going to drink well with your meal.
B and I opted to share a starter of the clams with the house special sauce which was fine although the clams themselves were a bit disappointin:, a little tired and not packing much flavour. However, the accompanying sauce was excellent and we spooned every last bit up from the plate. Even by this early stage in the evening it was turning out to be a fairly raucous affair and I struggle to remember what our companions were eating although I do seem to recall a flaming plate of chorizo being brought to the table which caused much oohing and aaahing.
For my main course I had one of my favourite Portuguese dishes, the Cataplana which came in its traditional copper clam. This version was fine but nothing special. However, it was a huge portion and would I guess defeat all but the biggest appetites. B had the monkfish rice, which was also a massive portion, served in the traditional terracotta dish it was a bit lacking in flavour. Perhaps we have just been spoiled by the quality of the food we get served up on our annual pilgrimage to Tavira. On the plus side our Carmen, our Spanish foodie friend, was very pleased with her Bacalhau Grelhado which she compared favourably to her mother's version praise indeed. Tory Boy had the steak on stone which you cook according to your taste on the very hot stone, it looked great and was a nice piece of foodie theatre, and he gave it a big thumbs up.
Towards the end of the meal I tried some of the Borba Reserva which had been ordered to compliment the steaks. It was a lovely deep red colour with a long finish and plenty of fruity, spicy flavours; another very good wine at a pretty decent price.
We finished with coffee and there was a nice touch of a little traditional custard tart for Esther with a birthday candle which rounded the evening off nicely. We had been treated extremely well all evening by the helpful and friendly staff and when the bill finally arrived it was no wallet buster and it was a pleasure to leave a decent tip. We had a lovely evening at A Torre and it's somewhere I would definitely go again; having said that it makes me long for the real taste of Portugal which is probably no bad thing. read more