Coffee drinkers are in for a treat in Portugal! We are quite serious about it. Drinking coffee in Portugal is an everyday part of life, with cafés found at almost on every street. It all started with the Portuguese colonialists in Brazil and equatorial African islands of São Tomé e Principe…
The espresso or bica (a short black expresso) is the most common coffee drink, although the name changes if you are in Porto where you might order a cimbalino instead, named after the La Cimbali espresso machines.
And then there are infinite variations on how it comes… The bica cheia is a full espresso cup; or if you’d like a double espresso, order um café duplo. An italiana is small, strong and the first few seconds of the machine’s coffee; whilst a carioca is the opposite, a full small cup minus the strongest first two seconds of an espresso. You can then ask for it não quente or not hot and they’ll add a dash of cold water in it for you; whilst a pingado has a small drop of milk added to it. In Lisbon! In the Alentejo or other rural communities of Portugal, the pingo (drop) might be of Medronho (a type of Portuguese fire water) or whisky.