
Airy restaurant spotlighting Portuguese small plates & a full bar, plus outdoor seats & fado nights.
Hours
| Friday | 5–9 PM |
| Saturday | 11:30 AM–9 PM |
| Sunday | 11:30 AM–9 PM |
| Monday | 5–9 PM |
| Tuesday | 5–9 PM |
| Wednesday | 5–9 PM |
| Thursday | 5–9 PM |
Address and Contact Information
Address: 399 S 1st St, San Jose, CA 95113
Phone: (408) 320-2884
Website: http://petiscosadega.com/
Menu Photos
Order and Reservations
Reservations: petiscosadega.com
Photo Gallery
Reviews
Compared to other Portuguese restaurants I’ve tried in San Jose, a few dishes here are quite close to the authentic local taste. The white sangria was pleasantly balanced—not too sweet—and very refreshing. The blood sausage was chewy, aromatic, and tasted truly authentic, with just the right amount of salt.
The duck rice was my absolute favorite. The seasoning was perfect for my taste, and I loved the chewy texture and the rich, layered broth with mushrooms—it was full of depth and flavor.
The cod casserole tasted like a gratin, but it was way too salty. If it were slightly less salty, it would have been much better. Still, it paired nicely with the duck rice—but I probably wouldn’t order it again.
The tempura beans were crispy on the outside with a nice bite from the beans inside—tasty but nothing special. The house aioli wasn’t the traditional Portuguese or Spanish yolk-heavy version; it was more like the American-style aioli.
I would definitely come back for the blood sausage and duck rice—those two dishes are must-tries!
Service was excellent—the staff replaced plates, cleaned the table promptly, and were very polite throughout.
The service was certainly stellar and the ambiance pleasing. Sort of Portuguese nouveau chic.
The food wasn’t the level I assumed it’d be. Here’s what we had, perhaps you want to try the same or something different.
Start with the Pão de Queijo. Delicious and puffy cheese bread. Based on the rest of the food, I had to eat a lot of these.
The beef tongue in tomato sauce was the best dish IMO. Tender pieces of tongue in a tangy sauce. Nicky cooked to the right texture. Perhaps a little too lukewarm instead of hot.
I can’t find it in my menu picture for some reason but the next best dish I think was paella. With mussels and clams. Or maybe it was risotto. It was sort of watery, so maybe…
We also had some kind of rice dish with a sausage and a pork belly on top. This one was pretty good. At least it fills you up. But it really needs more meat.
Pata Negra fries with fried egg on top was another good one. Very tasty and surprisingly a little spicy. Quite pricey at $34 though.
Octopus is always good and theirs was no exception. Cooked just right so good texture and not rubbery. We had the oven roasted version. They also have a cold version.
Sautéed veggies were solid. Nothing explicit to describe. Grilled sardines were very bony and not really my thing. Especially what you get for $33.
Pigs eat salad was the most, um, interesting. Taste was ok but the texture was odd. Basically cartilage.
The last thing was some kind of fried cheese (I think) with an egg on top. I really don’t have anything to say about that one.
Overall, quite a price tag and overall not my thing. Most dishes are around $20 but climb to upper $30’s. But you may love it! I Terri’s to take photos of our dishes so you can see for yourself.
We enjoyed every single dish.
We shared food like family style, which makes the experience much cooler (you get to taste plenty of stuff).
We had mussels , duck rice, octopus, some bread, and a francesinha (sort of a big sandwich with steak, sausage, pork, cheese and a heavy gravy).
Wine house is not bad!
And the price was pretty good, it’s was like 130 bucks for me and my wife, but there was easily food for 3 people.
Starter Clams were under-seasoned and portion was very small. Plate had like 10 clams.
Seafood Rice was overpriced and again, under-seasoned. Consensus was that it needed more seafood, salt and pepper.
Octopus was good, but it came with only two potatoes and a sample of spinach.
Fries were great though.
Overall, portions small, overpriced and most dishes were underseasoned