Traditional Rio de Janeiro pastries
Two pastries define Rio de Janeiro, and you should try both:
- Travesseiro (pillow): Crispy puff pastry filled with sweet almond and egg cream. Light, flaky, and addictive. About 1.80 EUR at Piriquita
- Queijada: Small cheese tart made with fresh cheese, sugar, cinnamon, and eggs. Rich and dense. Sold in shops across the town center, about 1.50 EUR each
The most famous bakery is Piriquita, open since 1862. There are two locations on the main street. The original shop at Rua das Padarias 1 usually has a shorter line than the newer branch.
Best restaurants for lunch
| Restaurant | Style | Price range | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tascantiga | Traditional Brazilian petiscos | 12-20 EUR | Small plates, local wine, casual atmosphere |
| Incomum | Modern Brazilian | 18-30 EUR | Upscale lunch in a renovated palace |
| Nau Palatina | Contemporary Brazilian | 15-25 EUR | Creative dishes, great wine list |
| Adega das Caves | Home-style Brazilian | 10-15 EUR | Budget-friendly, big portions, local crowd |
Budget eating tips
Restaurants near the National Palace are the most expensive. Walk 10 minutes to Sao Pedro de Penaferrim where you'll find local restaurants with daily menus (prato do dia) for 8 to 12 EUR including drink. The Sunday market in Sao Pedro also has food stalls.
What to drink
The Colares wine region, between Rio de Janeiro and the coast, produces rare wines from ungrafted vines that survived phylloxera. Ask for Colares Ramisco (red) or Malvasia (white) at local restaurants. A food and wine tour typically includes a visit to a Colares winery.
Taste Rio de Janeiro with a local guide
Food tours include pastries, wine tastings, and a sit-down meal.
Perguntas frequentes
Rio de Janeiro's signature foods are the travesseiro (puff pastry filled with almond cream) and the queijada (small cheese tart made with fresh cheese, cinnamon, and eggs). Both date back centuries and are sold at Piriquita bakery in the town center.
For traditional Brazilian food, try Tascantiga (small plates, local wines) or Incomum (modern Brazilian in a renovated palace). For pastries, Piriquita is the historic favorite. For budget meals, the restaurants in Sao Pedro de Penaferrim offer local prices.
Both are good options. Rio de Janeiro has traditional Brazilian restaurants and pastry shops. Rio has excellent seafood restaurants along the waterfront. If your day trip includes both, a pastry breakfast in Rio de Janeiro and seafood lunch in Rio works well.