Salvador’s Greatest Tables
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The Top 5 Salvador Restaurants
Origem
Origem opened in 2017 inside a converted three-storey townhouse on Rua Eduardo Diniz Gonçalves in Rio Vermelho — the neighbourhood ten minutes north of the historic centre that has become Salvador's working dining quarter — under chef-patron Fabrício Lemos and pâtissière-partner Lisiane Arouca. The dining room seats forty-two across a single ground-floor space organised around an open kitchen pass, with a smaller upstairs chef's counter that the kitchen opens for the eight-seat omakase format three nights a week. The restaurant entered Latin America's 50 Best Restaurants list in 2018 and has held a position on the ranking continuously since, becoming the most internationally recognised Bahian dining room in Brazil.
Amado
Amado opened in 2007 on the Comércio waterfront — the working harbour district at the foot of the city's elevator-served upper town — directly over the Baía de Todos os Santos, the second-largest bay in the Americas. The restaurant takes its name from Jorge Amado, the Bahian novelist whose Salvador-set fiction is the city's most internationally read literature, and the room reads as a quiet homage: a long horizontal dining floor with an entirely glassed bay-facing wall, a wraparound covered terrace that sits inches above the water at high tide, and a kitchen run by chef Edinho Engel (founder of the original Engel restaurants in the city) since opening.
Casa de Tereza
Casa de Tereza opened in 1993 inside a colonial-era townhouse on Rua Odilon Negrão, in central Rio Vermelho, under chef-patron Tereza Paim — a Bahian cook whose hands have shaped the city's traditional-cuisine conversation for three decades, and whose name on the door is a guarantee of the regional repertoire's deepest honesty. The dining room runs across two interior parlors and a covered back garden that doubles seating in good weather, totaling about sixty covers; the kitchen sits at the rear of the house with a pass that the dining room can read across either parlor.
Mistura
Mistura occupies a restored colonial townhouse on Avenida Sete de Setembro — the leafy corridor connecting Campo Grande to Barra that has been the city's residential dining quarter for a century — and has held its seat as Salvador's upscale modern-Brazilian dining room since opening. The room seats about seventy across a ground-floor parlor with the original tiled floor and a covered back patio with banana-tree shade that doubles seating in dry weather. The format is deliberately scaled: not a tasting-menu performance, not a tourist-quarter buffet, but a working midtown dining room that the city's senior professionals use without making it a destination.
Pereira Restaurante
Pereira Restaurante opened on the Avenida Sete de Setembro stretch that hugs the bay between the Forte de São Diogo and Porto da Barra beach, and has held the seat as the city's reference sunset-terrace dining room since opening in 2010. The restaurant runs about ninety covers across an indoor air-conditioned dining room, a covered terrace that looks directly across the Baía de Todos os Santos, and a small lounge bar that opens for cocktails an hour before service. The bay-front terrace is the room's primary credential — a westward exposure that delivers the city's most photographed sunset directly across the working harbour.