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Travesseiro de Sintra: The Pillow Pastry That Conquered a Hillside Town

I still remember the first time someone handed me a travesseiro straight out of its paper wrapper — still warm, dusted so heavily in icing sugar that it dusted my jacket too. One bite in, the pastry shattered loudly, almond cream spilling out at the seams.

Sintra isn't Lisbon. Tucked into the hills west of the capital, it keeps its own morning mist well into summer, and it has always kept its own sweets, too. In 1862, Constança Gomes opened Casa Piriquita — a nickname King Dom Carlos I gave her, teasing her small stature, that stuck as the bakery's name. The royal couple summered in Sintra and couldn't get enough of the house's queijadas. It wasn't until after the Second World War, though, in a Portugal quietly reinventing itself, that the next generation dreamed up something new from an old recipe book they'd stumbled across: the travesseiro was born. The exact recipe has stayed a closely guarded family secret for five generations since.

Stand outside Casa Piriquita on a July morning and the first thing you'll notice is the queue — tourists and regulars alike, all here for the same thing: puff pastry folded into a pillow shape, filled with a cream of eggs, sugar and almonds, then buried under icing sugar. The name comes from that soft, cushioned look, which makes the first bite all the more surprising — a sharp, almost noisy crackle before the cream takes over. This year, the travesseiro even landed on TasteAtlas's 2026 ranking of the world's best pastries, alongside pastel de nata and bola de berlim. Nobody in Sintra seems surprised — as far as the locals are concerned, Piriquita invented a classic decades ago.

What makes it so distinctive is its place in a whole lineage of Portuguese convent sweets: recipes built on eggs and sugar, first devised by nuns who used egg whites to starch their habits and needed somewhere to put all those leftover yolks. The travesseiro belongs to that same family as pastel de nata and pastel de Tentúgal — laminated pastry as the vessel for a rich, golden custard.

We don't have travesseiros on our shelves in Brussels — the recipe is, after all, a well-kept Sintra family secret. But the same craft shows up every day in our Pastel de Tentúgal: thin, golden puff pastry, hand-worked, that gives way to a silky, custardy filling. Different pastry, different town, same refusal to cut corners.

If a good crackle of pastry sounds like exactly what you need, our Pastel de Tentúgal is waiting at Wooly in Stockel, Tongres, Uccle or Waterloo. It's not Sintra, but it carries the same generosity in every fold.

Discover our Pastel de Tentúgal and other typical Portuguese pastries in-store or online.

Find our artisan pastries in our Brussels stores or order online.

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