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Friday, January 28, 2005

Sweet Belem, Petersham

The pasteis de nata is the king of custard tarts... flaky buttery pastry, an eggy cooked custard interior and a caramelised golden-brown complexion combine to create the perfect mouthful.

Chinese daan tart theories aside, the generally accepted birthplace of the pasteis de nata is the local pastry cafe Antiga Confeitaria de Belem on the seaside outskirts of Lisbon.


Photo courtesy of VirtualTourist.com

[Insert shameless travel-dropping here].

Yes I've had the pleasure of eating the real McCoy at the Belem cafe and yes the experience has so far been unequalled. Still-warm tarts straight out of the oven, pastry so flaky it's almost earthshattering, and shakers of icing sugar for extra sweetness on every table.

So I have a self-confessed weak spot for the humble Portuguese custard tart and was delighted to discover Sweet Belem in Sydney's Little Portugal a year ago.



A large painting of the Torre de Belem dominates and Portuguese-style blue and white tiles adorn the tables and wall.



Sweet Belem offers a number of pastries, slices, tortes and cakes... this one's for pinkcocoa!



But it's the pasteis de nata we're after. If you time your visit well, you should be able to pick up these tarts from Joao de Almeida fresh out of the oven... still warm, yet irresistably flaky. And I would have to say that if you like your pastry extra buttery and so crispy it sounds like you're eating a bag of crisps, then these babies are for you!

At $1.70 each, they're a veritable bargain. Particularly when coffee shops in the City regularly sell soggier versions for at least $3.00.

The pasteis de nata at Sweet Belem do come topped with a genereous sprinkle of cinnamon, adding a pleasant spiciness.

The tarts here are a little more expensive than the ones from Fernando Ramos and Carlos Fernandes at La Patisserie a few doors down, but for this pastry fan, they're worth every penny.




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Sweet Belem
35B and 35C New Canterbury Rd, Petersham
Tel: +61 (02) 9572 6685

Opening hours
Wednesday to Saturday 8.30am - 5pm
Sunday 9am - 4pm

This has been included as a Rewarding Adventure on Grab Your Fork's Top 10 Sydney Eats for Tourists. Read the entire list here.

Related GrabYourFork posts:
Petersham - Costa Do Sol (Portuguese)
Petersham - Perama (Modern Greek)

8 comments:

  1. awwwww..how sweet of you, AG! *sob sob* Now now, I am going to send this post to my bf as a big big hint for valentine's!!! :"p

    There was a short heat wave of pasteis de nata (we called it portugese tart in Taiwan) in Taiwan about 4 years ago, I think. And even KFC was selling these tarts! The wave died down soon and I haven't seen much of the tart around anymore!

    okie. noted this down. Gonna try head to Petersham one day. And again, I have not been to Petersham!!!!

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  2. Oh yeah and I forgot to mention you sure are one little devil!!!! Seducing me with a pinkcocoa's cake you know I can never ever resist!!

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  3. oh yes, these Portuguese egg tarts are indeed delicious. There was a craze for them here in SG about 6 or 7 years ago. One bakery introduced these tarts, they became a huge hit, and many other bakeries mushroomed to sell these egg tarts too. It was sheer madness. People queued to buy the tarts. But the craze fizzled out as quickly as it started. Now, I hardly see these around.

    Julia
    www.aromacookery.com

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  4. Hi there,

    I'm new to your site and it has been nice reading about your food adventures.

    I went to Sweet Belem after reading your post and I must say the Portugese tart was lighter and more refined than other tarts I have tasted. Nice but different~

    Oh, and it was so annoying that the lady was highly fussy about how I shouldn't be taking pictures. Quite a turn off .. My brother kindly pointed out how little diff it would be from taking pictures of the takeaways we bought.

    Just wondering if any of you food bloggers had similar experiences?

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  5. hey hey i got the fussy lady too and she didnt like me taking fotos so i just took a foto of what i bought. its a shame realli because it seems like we're all boosting the ppl going there! oh and i went to rise finally! thanks so much for blogging about it!

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  6. hey people
    I did not get the fussy lady when I was there. I got the owner (he's the one making the portugese tart) rocketing out from his kitchen and told us no photos were allowed at all unless you asked. We politely offered to delete the photos but he said it's fine but also told us if we wanted photos, we could have asked first.
    I was going to post about Sweet Belem but ha! I got too lazy. Besides AG did a good post here. :)
    On other note, I was told by a lady at Max Brennan that even photography of the food at our table is not acceptable for copyright reason.

    AG, do you actually tell those shops/owners that you are putting it on your blog? At one time, I took out my heavy accent from home and pretended I wanted to show my parents what wonderful food they had here in Oz! But *sigh* I have been told off so many times, I am wary about taking photos, even the food we are eating on our table! Maybe I just looked too sneaky!!

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  7. I went here on my bus ticket tour of Sydney as well. It was actually for dessert after Petersham Charcoal Chicken opposite (I could live on their peri peri sauce) and the tarts were as good as you said.

    Of course, the ones in Macau are better.... (actually they weren't, but it's where I got into portuguese food, try A Lorcha if you're over there)

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  8. Hi Mr_Gimlet - I really wanted to go to Macau the last time I was in HK but ran out of time, alas. And mmm... now I have a craving for Portuguese chicken followed by pasteis de nata!

    ReplyDelete

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