Pastelaria Páscoa, My Favorite Pastry Shop In Portugal

Pastry shop in Portugal - Pastelaria Páscoa in Almada Portugal

Pastelaria Páscoa in Almada Portugal, is my favorite pastry shop in Portugal

Since I’ve talked before about my favorite pastries, mil folhas, I thought I’d share my favorite pastry shop in Portugal where I normally buy them. It’s a good little walk from where my mother-in-law lives in Cova da Piedade to Almada, but in this case, we drove. That’s my husband in the van on the right, waiting for me to take the picture.

Nice pastry shop worker

Below, an employee at the Pastelaria Páscoa, wraps up a few of my favorite pastries, mil folhas. My two oldest girls and my sister asked me to bring a few home. And of course my youngest, Lisbon, and I had to have some too! I’ve tried a lot shops but this is my favorite pastry shop in Portugal. Yes, I’ve had other good pastries, but also some really awful ones. This place is consistently good—and not just for mil folhas. At anywhere from .85 to 1 Euro, they are more than four or five times less expensive than those I can find in the States.

By the way, I’m usually a stickler for speaking Portuguese when I’m there, but this guy LOVES English, and it made him happy to practice speaking with me. He learned English from TV and video games.

By the way, he has a woman friend in Texas, which is why he wants to go there. I have no idea why he’d ever want to leave my favorite pastry shop in Portugal, crammed full as it is of all the pastries he can eat, lol! Seriously, though, I think he’s sweet on her, so if you know anyone in Texas who is talking with a Portuguese guy in Almada who works in a pastry shop, tell her we have this video.

We also brought these

Mil folhas from Portugal

And these

Mil folhas from Portugal

And a few more from this great pastry shop in Portugal

Mil folhas from Portugal

This picture shows all the pastries we brought home to America. Yeah, we had four containers that we took in advance to this pastry shop. The box containers they give are actually better for keeping the pastries, but they wouldn’t survive on a plane. The only problem is that when you buy them in bulk this way, invariably they turn out a bit smaller than in the shop. But it’s still worth taking a taste home.

Yeah, I might be a little nuts, but keep in mind the last time I was there was four years ago! That’s a long time to wait for mil folhas. I packaged them up in wax paper and into the freezer they went. So far, only the ones we gave away have been eaten. Wonder how long that will last! (Update: by doling them out slowly, they lasted exactly one year!)

I’ll be posting more pictures soon. But for now, I’d better get back to writing! Meanwhile, if you ever get to Europe, try to stop in at my favorite pastry shop in Portugal. Tell them the crazy American said hi.

Teyla Rachel Branton

Copyright 2017 Teyla Rachel Branton

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8 Responses to “Pastelaria Páscoa, My Favorite Pastry Shop In Portugal”

  1. Frank Paine

    Those pastries look a lot like the French Napoleons, but don’t have the cream![Sigh!] They look delicious. Frank Paine

    Reply
    • Teyla Rachel Branton

      They are very similar, but as you noted, the filling is egg-based instead of cream like the Napoleons. In fact, in some places in Northern Portugal, they call the mil folhas by the name Napoleon (but it’s still egg-based), and use mil folhas for something that has cream in it like the French Napoleons. Crazy, but true. I can’t wait!

      Reply
      • Frank Paine

        Hi, again, Teyla. I think I prefer the egg filling idea. Muito rico either way. E delicioso! E nao sou roboto!!!!! Frank P. P.S. Is there such a word as “roboto” in Portuguese?

        Reply
        • Teyla Rachel Branton

          It is rich! Yum! Um, are you looking for robô? That’s robot, right?

          Reply
          • Frank Paine

            You’re probably right. I’ve never had a reason to write that word in Portuguese, and my keyboard doesn’t do Portuguese diacritical marks. Frank P.

  2. Lia

    Sounds good, but I do not think I wil go to Almada for this. Pity, but we get tired quite easily and it is quite a distance from our home in Santiago do Escoural. But, I know of a very good pastry shop in Montemor-o-Novo. I will check it out there, next time I go there. 🙂
    It is nice in Portugal, don’t you think? We love it and are enjoying our pension here (instead of Holland).
    Enjoy your stay and if you ever want to visit, you are welcome to stop by.
    Lia.

    Reply
    • Teyla Rachel Branton

      I think they will be similar in Montemor-o-Novo! In the north, they often put a different cream in them. But then they usually sell Napoleons with egg-based filling, which are like the mil folhas I love.

      Reply
    • Teyla Rachel Branton

      And just to add that a lot of people retire to Portugal. I plan to start spending more time there myself once my children are grown or out of school.

      Reply

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