Guide
What to Buy at a Portuguese Farm Shop (And What to Ignore)
Written by the operator at Alentejo Park
·Updated November 2024
Portugal has a farm shop problem. The physical format — a rustic wooden shelf, jars with cloth-lid covers, handwritten labels — is so easy to replicate that products with no connection to the farm or region often appear alongside genuinely local goods. Here is how to read a shelf.
Things that are almost always genuine
Honey: beekeeping is hyperlocal, and Portuguese beekeepers generally do not misrepresent their honey. Ask for the harvest location if you want to be sure. Olive oil in tins rather than bottles: glass bottles are retail packaging; tin is what producers use for their own product. Sea salt from Tavira, Castro Marim, or Alcochete: the Algarve estuary salt is genuinely good and genuinely local. Almonds in autumn: if you are there in August or September and the almonds are fresh-shelled, they are almost certainly local.
Things that are frequently not genuine
Medronho branded as "farm-made": medronho (arbutus spirit) production is regulated and most small producers sell through intermediaries. Ceramics: almost none of the "hand-painted" ceramics in farm shops are made locally. Cork products: cork forests are in the Alentejo and Ribatejo; Algarve cork products are generally made elsewhere. Honey labelled as "mountain honey" in a coastal shop: this is a flavour description, not a provenance claim.
At Alentejo Park
We sell oil from our trees, honey from our apiaries, jam from our kitchen, almonds from our trees, and wine from a winery four kilometres east. We do not sell anything else as our own that is not our own.
Looking for a place to stop in the eastern Algarve?
Alentejo Park is 5 minutes from the A22 junction at Castro Marim. Twelve pitches, full hookup, free dump station for guests. →