Cantina 32
Industrial-vintage Rua das Flores room with playful Portuguese plates
Porto's granite downtown, where century-old petisco houses share the slope with stand-up wine bars.
The Baixa is Porto's granite heart, a downward-sloping tangle of streets between Aliados and the river where ornate nineteenth-century façades give way to tiled shopfronts and stand-up wine bars. It is dense, loud and lived-in: office workers, students and old men in cafés share the same blocks, and the dining runs from century-old petisco houses to tightly run tasting rooms. Here you find the canonical dishes of the north done seriously, the cataplana, the slow-braised meats, the salt cod a dozen ways, alongside a newer guard pouring natural wine by the glass after dark. The Baixa rewards wandering: the best tables are often down a stairwell or behind an unmarked door.
4 locali
Industrial-vintage Rua das Flores room with playful Portuguese plates
1931 Passos Manuel grande dame still cooking tripas à moda do Porto
Reputedly Portugal's oldest restaurant, on a São Bento back-lane
Tucked beside São Bento, a snug room of sea-led petiscos
2 locali