Wednesday 7 December 2016

10 reasons why Lisbon should be your next city break this december



                             Image result for Lisbon 
Lisbon rose nine places to 26th in the World’s Best Cities category at this year's Telegraph Travel Awards, voted for by more than 70,000 readers. Here's why it's proving so popular...
1. There's fine dining by the bowlful

Last week saw three restaurants in Lisbon awarded their first Michelin star - LAB by Sergi Arola, Loco, and Alma - reinforcing Lisbon's growing culinary reputation. There are now six one-star establishments in the city and one - Belcanto - with two.  
2. Your pound goes a long way

The post-Brexit slump hit travellers to Portugal (and the rest of the Eurozone), but sterling has recovered much of the ground it lost since then. Even without the pound's resurgence, the cost of living in Portugal is famously good value compared to its European neighbours. The Post Office rates it as the fourth cheapest city break in Europe, and the cheapest in Western Europe, with a basket of 12 typical holiday purchases (including two nights in a three-star hotel, an evening meal for two, travel cards and entry into a handful of top attractions) costing just £157.78.
3. And goes even further for beer

A bottle of the amber nectar can cost as little as €2 (£1.69) in restaurants and cafes, according to the Post Office.
4. Port is little dearer, but with good reason

Portugal’s national drink, port or porto, is in abundance in the city. If you’re not a fan of supping the rich fortified wine, it’s almost as much fun to nip into one of the plentiful off-licences to simply peruse the walls and walls of bottles, ranging from the dusty, worn, 100-year-old, €1,000 stock to fresh post-Millennium additions, all labelled in a classic, stencil style.
5. It has a passion for discovery

Lisbon is as proud as punch of its role in the Age of Discovery, with the city being the starting place for dozens of exploratory voyages around the globe, including Vasco da Gama’s expedition to India in 1497. Padrão dos Descobrimento, a large monument on the north bank of the Tagus, celebrates this: it features statues of early navigators peering out to sea, led by Henry the Navigator.
6. And hard-working trams

The city still supports century-old wooden trams and iron funiculars that lurch up and down the narrow streets. Just watching them trundle along is joy, while the metal tracks cut into winding cobbled streets is exemplary of Lisbon’s nostalgic character.
7. There's this spooky elevator

Willy Wonka has nothing on this. Set at the end of Rua de Santa Justa, the Carmo Lift is said to be the only remaining conventional vertical lift in the city and has been a visitor attraction since it was completed around 1902.
8. It knows good sausage

If you thought the Spanish did sausage well, wait until you’ve tried the Portuguese range. Lisbon’s second square, Praca da Figueira, often plays host to a market, replete with food stalls that fill the air with the aromas of everything from chorizo and rich black pudding to farinheira, a smoked flour sausage, and alheira, a chicken equivalent.
9. And loves Brazil

And the city’s miniature Christ the Redeemer, Cristo Rei or Christ the King to the locals, on the south bank of the Tagus that looks out over the city is testament to that.
10. You can try the world's finest custard tarts

The custard tarts at Pasteis de Belém are world-famous and that’s why queues for the sweet, rich, perfectly crisp treats often stretch along the pavement.



Written by Hugh Morris

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