Cairo’s iconic street dish of rice, lentils, macaroni, chickpeas, spicy tomato sauce, and fried onions—chaotic yet harmonious. 1)
Spiced minced meat stuffed into flatbread and baked or grilled, crisp outside and juicy inside. 2)
Baked molokhia with meat or chicken, thicker and more robust than the soup version. 3)
Rice, toasted bread, garlic vinegar, and meat layered with tomato sauce, celebratory and indulgent. 4)
Alexandria-style spicy liver popularized by Cairo street vendors. 5)
Rice baked slowly with milk, butter, and sometimes meat, creamy inside with a golden crust. 6)
Egyptian-style shawarma using beef or chicken, heavily garlicky and lightly spiced. 7)
Fava bean falafel fried crisp, greener and lighter than Levantine chickpea versions. 8)
Pigeons filled with rice or freekeh, roasted until tender—an urban delicacy. 9)
Zucchini, peppers, grape leaves, and eggplant stuffed with herbed rice, a Cairene household staple. 10)
Salt-fermented mullet eaten during Sham el-Nessim, controversial yet deeply traditional. 11)
Gelatin-rich cow’s feet soup served in downtown eateries, hearty and restorative. 12)
Semolina cake soaked in syrup, often topped with almonds or cream. 13)
Bread-and-milk pudding with nuts and raisins, baked until bubbling and golden. 14)
Thick, warm winter drink made from orchid starch or cornstarch, topped with nuts and coconut. 15)