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Vine and dandy: Madeira’s Fajã dos Padres is a glimpse of paradise

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On Madeira’s south coast lies a cove, rich with vines, a new cable car ride, abundant fruit – and cool cottages to stay in

Tomatoes grow like weeds on the paths. That’s how fertile the land is at Fajã dos Padres, a small cove on the south coast of Madeira – known on the island as the place where the famous Malmsey vines survived phylloxera. Until recently, the only way to get to the cove was from the sea or to take a rickety-looking glass elevator. Now there’s a cable car running visitors to the heart of the vineyard for €10. As an escape from the cranes and cruise ships of Funchal, it’s worth it. The descent feels like a ride down into a secret garden of Eden.

Named after the Jesuit priests who founded the vineyard in 1595, Fajã dos Padres has been in the Jardim Fernandes family for three generations. They were the ones to discover the sole-surviving malvasia vine, and now produce single-vineyard Malmsey on site. It’s not just vines: bananas, figs, avocados, mangos, courgettes, squash, sweet potato and passionfruit and a whole manner of other fruit and vegetables grow in profusion and supply the small restaurant by the jetty and the pebbled beach. There you can eat traditional Madeiran dishes like peixe espada com banana– battered black scabbardfish served with fresh vegetables and a fried banana – a surprisingly enjoyable combination.

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