STOLEN WATER MEDIA
World Cup Eats
A global food guide — one signature dish from every nation at the tournament
Eat Your Way Through the World Cup
48 teams, each playing three group-stage matches — that's a world of cuisines to explore.
DZ
Algeria
Couscous royale is the Friday ritual — semolina steamed three times until it's impossibly light, served with a stew of lamb, chicken, merguez sausage, and seven vegetables (carrots, turnips, zucchini, chickpeas, the list is flexible) in a saffron-and-harissa broth. Start the meal with chorba frik — a lamb and cracked-wheat soup that's the national hug during Ramadan. Finish with m'hanncha, a coiled almond-paste pastry dusted with powdered sugar, and mint tea poured from three feet up so it foams.
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AR
Argentina
Asado isn't a recipe, it's a Sunday. Beef over wood coals — bife de chorizo, vacío, morcilla — served slowly, with chimichurri that's more parsley-and-garlic than the stuff you get on U.S. menus. Then empanadas (Salteñas are the gold standard), provoleta (a puck of melted provolone with oregano), and dulce de leche with everything that stands still.
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AU
Australia
The Aussie meat pie is the answer — palm-sized, flaky pastry, ground beef and gravy filling, eaten one-handed with the other hand holding a beer. The pre-match version is a sausage roll. The post-match version is the same sausage roll. For a sit-down option, lamingtons (sponge cake dipped in chocolate, rolled in coconut) for dessert and a flat white that will make every other coffee you've had in DFW seem confused about its purpose.
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AT
Austria
Wiener Schnitzel is the national obligation — a veal cutlet pounded thin enough to read through, breaded and fried in clarified butter until the crust is a pale gold that ripples away from the meat. It's served with a lemon wedge and a side of potato salad or Erdäpfelsalat (warm potato in vinegar and onion). The second answer is Tafelspitz — boiled beef in broth with horseradish and apple-horseradish sauce, the Habsburg Empire's official comfort food. Then Sacher-Torte for dessert, because you are legally obligated. The drink is a Gösser lager or an Almdudler, an alpine herbal soda that tastes like ginger ale's more interesting cousin.
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BE
Belgium
Moules-frites is the national dish, and the rules are stricter than they look — fries cooked twice in beef tallow, served on the side, never under the mussels (which would steam them limp). The mussels themselves come in a black pot, steamed in white wine and celery and shallot, with bread for the broth. After that, a Belgian waffle (the gaufre de Liège, denser, with pearl sugar caramelizing on the iron — not the lighter Brussels version Americans usually mean) and a Trappist beer brewed by actual monks.
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BO
Bolivia
Salteña is the Bolivian empanada that the rest of Latin America has quietly agreed is better than their own. A sweet-savory pastry shell — slightly eggwashed, golden — holding a stew of beef or chicken with potato, peas, olives, hard-boiled egg, and a broth that's been set with gelatin so it stays liquid until you bite. You eat it standing, tilted forward, so the juice doesn't ruin your shirt. Traditionally a late-morning snack with a llajua (tomato-chile salsa) on the side. Nobody makes a proper one in under three hours.
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BA
Bosnia & Herzegovina
Ćevapi is the argument Bosnians, Serbs, and Croats will never settle — but in Sarajevo it's ten small grilled finger-sausages of minced beef and lamb, tucked into a warm somun flatbread with raw chopped onion and a spoonful of kajmak (thick clotted cream that shouldn't work on meat but does). Add burek, a coiled filo pie of lamb or cheese eaten standing up at a buregdžinica. Then sarma (stuffed cabbage rolls in winter), and bosanska kahva — Bosnian coffee, served in a bakreno džezva (copper pot) with a rahat lokum cube, sipped slowly, never hurried. The coffee ritual is the country.
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BR
Brazil
Feijoada is the Saturday institution — black beans cooked all day with pork (shoulder, ribs, sausage, and the parts your grandmother won't let you ask about), served with rice, sautéed collards, farofa (toasted cassava flour), and orange slices to cut the richness. Then picanha — the cap of sirloin, salted heavily, grilled over open flame, sliced thin against the grain. And a caipirinha, made with cachaça, lime, and sugar, that tastes deceptively like fruit punch and absolutely is not.
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CM
Cameroon
Ndolé is the national dish — bitter leaves (a wild African green) simmered with ground peanuts, crayfish, and your choice of beef or fish, served over rice or with boiled plantain. The flavor is deep, nutty, savory in a way that rearranges your expectations of what a leaf can taste like. Next to that: poulet DG ("director general chicken" — chicken sautéed with ripe plantains, vegetables, and a coconut-lime sauce), braised fish with pepper sauce, and fufu (pounded cassava or plantain, eaten with the hands, used to scoop up whatever stew is on the table). Finish with ginger juice — fresh-pressed, strong enough to warm your chest.
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CA
Canada
The honest answer is poutine — fries that hold up, dark gravy with body, cheese curds that have to squeak when you bite them. Anything less is a tray of soggy nachos pretending. The other Canada on a plate is breakfast: peameal bacon (Canadian back bacon rolled in cornmeal, on a kaiser bun), real maple syrup that costs what real maple syrup costs, and a butter tart for the road. Montreal-style smoked meat sandwiches and a proper St. Viateur bagel — boiled in honey water, baked over wood — are the ones DFW will struggle to find.
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CV
Cape Verde
Cachupa is the national everything — a slow-simmered stew of hominy corn, beans, sweet potato, cassava, cabbage, and whatever meat or fish the cook has on hand (chorizo, pork shoulder, tuna are traditional; there's a rich version and a poor version and a leftover version called cachupa refogada that gets pan-fried the next morning with a fried egg on top and is arguably the best of the three). Pair it with a shot of grogue — the local sugarcane spirit, clear and punchy, closer to Brazilian cachaça than anything else. Fresh grilled tuna or wahoo, rubbed with piri-piri and lime, is the other non-negotiable.
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CL
Chile
The Chilean empanada — specifically the empanada de pino, a baked pastry the size of your palm filled with ground beef, onion, olives (pitted or not, be warned), a slice of hard-boiled egg, and sometimes a raisin that splits the country into two angry camps. Then pastel de choclo: a sweetcorn pudding baked over a layer of ground beef, chicken, olives, and that same raisin, served in the casserole dish it was cooked in, with a dusting of sugar on top that stops making sense about halfway through the first bite and then makes total sense by the last. The drink is a pisco sour or a terremoto — cheap white wine, pineapple ice cream, and a float of grenadine that is more dangerous than it looks.
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CO
Colombia
Bandeja paisa is the national dish — a tray (literally, 'paisa platter') with rice, red beans, ground beef, chicharrón, fried egg, plantain, avocado, and a corn arepa, all on one plate. It is enormous. It is a lot. It is the kind of meal you order once a year and remember for six months. The everyday star is the arepa — flat, griddled corn cake, eaten with cheese for breakfast or split open and stuffed for lunch. Sancocho (a long-simmered chicken or beef stew with yuca, plantain, corn) is the Sunday meal. And the coffee — Colombia is the third-largest producer in the world, and the good single-origin stuff from Huila or Antioquia is genuinely transformative.
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CR
Costa Rica
Gallo pinto is the national breakfast — black beans and rice cooked together with cilantro, onion, and a Tico-only condiment called Salsa Lizano (think Worcestershire's tropical cousin), served with eggs, fried plantain, and natilla (sour cream). The other essential is the casado — a lunch plate of rice, beans, a protein (chicken, beef, fish), salad, plantain, sometimes a tortilla. It means 'married,' which is a very Tico way to describe the marriage of components. And then ceviche on the Pacific coast, fresh fish in lime, served with saltines, eaten with a Pilsen beer at 11am.
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HR
Croatia
On the Dalmatian coast, dinner is grilled fish — branzino, orata, scampi — pulled from the Adriatic that morning, dressed with olive oil pressed in a village press, salt, lemon. Inland, it is ćevapi: small finger-shaped grilled meat sausages served on lepinja flatbread with raw onion and ajvar (a roasted red pepper relish that should be in every American refrigerator). Then black risotto stained with cuttlefish ink, peka (meat and potatoes slow-roasted under an iron bell covered in coals), and rakija — fruit brandy strong enough to cure both a cold and the desire to drive home.
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CW
Curaçao
Keshi yena is the national dish and the best thing to ever happen to a wheel of Gouda. A hollowed-out Edam or Gouda is stuffed with spiced, stewed meat (usually chicken, sometimes goat, often studded with raisins, olives, capers, and a whisper of nutmeg), then baked until the cheese melts down around the filling like a savory volcano. It's a Dutch colonial artifact reinvented by enslaved Africans using the cheese rinds their enslavers discarded. On the side: funchi (cornmeal polenta, grilled or fried), pan batí (a thick coconut-tinged pancake), stoba (slow-cooked stew — kabritu stoba, the goat version, is the one to order), and a glass of awa di lamunchi, the island's spiced lime drink.
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CZ
Czechia
Svíčková is the Sunday lunch: a thick slab of marinated beef sirloin, cooked slow, served under a silky cream-and-root-vegetable sauce the color of butterscotch, with bread dumplings (knedlíky) to sop it up, a spoon of cranberry sauce, and a curl of whipped cream on the plate that sounds wrong and tastes correct. Then goulash (guláš) served in a carved-out loaf of dark rye, smažený sýr (breaded fried cheese, exactly as good as it sounds), and whatever's on tap — which in Prague is Pilsner Urquell at 4°C, poured in three pulls, with a foam head two fingers deep. The beer is not a beverage. The beer is infrastructure.
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DK
Denmark
Smørrebrød is the answer most Danes give first — open-faced rye bread, layered with cured fish or roast pork or pickled herring, served at lunch with cold beer and a snaps. The new Nordic movement (Noma, Geranium, etc.) reframed Danish food as foraged moss and fermented carrot, but the real cuisine is humbler: frikadeller (pork-veal meatballs with brown sauce and potatoes), stegt flæsk (crispy pork belly with parsley sauce), wienerbrød ('Vienna bread,' which Americans call a 'Danish'), and risalamande (rice pudding with cherry sauce, eaten exclusively at Christmas, with a hidden almond and a prize).
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CD
DR Congo
Moambe chicken is the national dish — chicken simmered in palm-nut sauce (moambe is the red-orange pulp of the palm fruit, not to be confused with palm oil), served with rice, pondu (cassava leaves pounded smooth and cooked with peanut butter), and a side of fried plantain. Fufu — a stiff, smooth starchy mash of cassava and corn flour, pulled by hand and dipped — is the bread of the meal. Finish with a cold Primus beer, which is what every Kinshasa bar is serving.
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EC
Ecuador
Encebollado is the national dish, the morning-after dish, the I-need-this-right-now dish. Albacore tuna simmered with yuca, tomato, cumin, and red onion until it becomes a soup that tastes like the coast. Served with chifles (plantain chips), fresh cilantro, lime, and ají picante. The other essential: ceviche ecuatoriano, which differs from Peruvian ceviche by being slightly sweeter, more tomato-forward, and served with popcorn on the side, which sounds wrong and is correct. For the highlands, llapingachos: thick potato cakes stuffed with cheese, fried, and served with a peanut sauce called salsa de maní.
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EG
Egypt
Koshari is the answer and it is not close. Rice, brown lentils, macaroni, vermicelli, chickpeas, fried onions, garlic vinegar, tomato sauce with a chili kick — five carbs in one bowl, somehow not heavy, sold for the equivalent of a dollar from carts all over Cairo. The other two essentials: ful medames (slow-cooked fava beans with cumin, lemon, olive oil — the national breakfast), and ta'meya, which is the Egyptian original of falafel made with fava beans instead of chickpeas, greener inside, crispier outside, and quietly better than the Levantine version most Americans know.
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GB
England
A proper Sunday roast — beef or lamb, Yorkshire pudding the size of your face, roast potatoes crisped in beef dripping, peas, gravy that takes a stock pot two days to make. The other answer is fish and chips, eaten outside, in the wind, ideally with a wooden fork. Add curry sauce if you're north of Birmingham, mushy peas if you have any sense.
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FR
France
Steak frites is the easy answer, but the French dish that actually translates to a soccer Sunday is moules-frites — a heaping iron pot of mussels in white wine and shallots, a paper cone of fries on the side, mayonnaise that's better than the French will admit. Or a proper duck confit, the leg crackling on top, the fat doing 80% of the work. End with a cheese plate that doesn't apologize for the smell.
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DE
Germany
The honest answer is currywurst — a steamed bratwurst, sliced into coins, drowned in a curry-spiked tomato sauce, paper plate, plastic fork, eaten standing up outside a bahnhof. The fancy answer is schweinshaxe, a roasted pork knuckle the size of your fist, crackling skin, served with potato dumplings and a pile of red cabbage. Pair either with a half-liter of pilsner that costs four dollars in Berlin and twelve at any American bar.
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GH
Ghana
Jollof rice — the dish, the debate, the diaspora war between Ghana, Nigeria, and Senegal that has produced more think-pieces than the offside rule. Ghanaian jollof is made with jasmine or basmati rice cooked in a tomato-and-pepper base with a smoky note from the bottom of the pot (the *socarrat*-like layer is the entire point). Then *waakye* — rice and beans cooked with millet leaves until the whole thing turns reddish-brown, served with shito (a black chili paste), boiled egg, fried plantain, gari, and stewed meat. It's breakfast. It's also dinner.
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HT
Haiti
Griot is the national dish — pork shoulder marinated in sour orange, lime, and epis (the green seasoning paste of Haitian cooking — parsley, thyme, scotch bonnet, scallion, bell pepper, garlic), braised until tender, then fried hard until the outside lacquers. It's served with diri ak pwa (rice and red beans cooked in coconut milk) and pikliz — a cabbage-and-carrot slaw pickled with scotch bonnet that will clear your sinuses in about four seconds. On January 1, Haitian Independence Day, every Haitian household eats soup joumou — a pumpkin-squash soup enslaved Haitians were forbidden from eating under French rule and declared their own at independence. It's recognized by UNESCO as intangible cultural heritage.
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HN
Honduras
The baleada is the national hand-held: a thick, smoky flour tortilla folded around mashed red beans, salty crumbled queso fresco, and a river of crema. The simple version stops there. The sencilla-plus version adds scrambled egg, avocado, chorizo, or carne asada until the thing is a two-handed operation. On the coast, the answer is sopa de caracol — a coconut-milk conch chowder that tastes like a vacation. The drink is a cold Salva Vida or a horchata de morro made from sesame and hibiscus.
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HU
Hungary
Goulash (gulyás) is the national soul — a paprika-heavy beef stew cooked long enough that the meat shreds at a glance, served with csipetke (pinched flour dumplings) or crusty white bread. The second pillar is pörkölt, a drier paprika stew, usually with veal or pork, served over nokedli (dumplings similar to spaetzle). Then lángos — deep-fried flat dough the size of a Frisbee, rubbed with garlic and finished with sour cream and grated cheese, the Budapest street-food answer to 2am hunger. The drink is a Unicum (a bitter, black, medicinal herbal liqueur that locals love and tourists flinch at) or an Egri Bikavér (Bull's Blood red wine).
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IR
Iran
Kabab koobideh — ground lamb-and-beef skewers, seasoned with grated onion and sumac, grilled over open flame — laid over a mountain of saffron-yellow basmati. Underneath, if the cook knows what they're doing, is tahdig: the crisp golden crust of rice that forms at the bottom of the pot, scraped out in sheets and served like a delicacy (because it is). Add grilled tomatoes, a wedge of raw onion, a dusting of more sumac, and doogh (salted yogurt soda with dried mint) to drink. Finish with saffron-rosewater ice cream or a sticky square of baklava.
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IQ
Iraq
Masgouf is the whole argument for Baghdad cuisine in one plate. A whole Tigris-style carp — traditionally split down the back, rubbed with salt, tamarind, and turmeric — staked upright around a wood fire and smoked slow until the skin is charred and the flesh is almost custardy. Served with pickled vegetables, fresh-bread torshi, and sumac-dusted onions. Beside it: kubba (bulgur shells stuffed with spiced lamb and pine nuts), dolma rolled in grape leaves, Iraqi-style biryani heavy on raisins and almonds, and endless cups of chai with cardamom and a sugar cube between the teeth.
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IT
Italy
Italian food in America has been flattened into red sauce and meatballs, which is fine, but it's not the point. The point is regional. A real Bolognese is a slow ragù with milk and a whisper of tomato. A real cacio e pepe is three ingredients (pasta, pecorino, black pepper) and the hardest dish on the menu to actually nail. Pizza in Naples is a wet, blistered, 90-second thing — closer to bread than to the foldable slab Americans grew up on. Tiramisu, properly, is mascarpone-eggs-coffee and nothing else.
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CI
Ivory Coast
Attiéké is the answer to a question most Americans haven't thought to ask — fermented, granulated cassava, steamed into couscous-sized pearls, served with grilled fish (usually tilapia or dorade) marinated in onion and chile. The side you want is alloco: fried plantains that have passed from sweet into almost savory. A good Ivorian plate is loud with Scotch bonnet, bright with lime, and finished with a tomato-pepper sauce called kedjenou that somebody's aunt has been simmering since morning.
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JM
Jamaica
Jerk chicken is the export, but jerk in Jamaica is a cooking method, not a flavor — slow-smoked over green pimento wood (allspice) with a marinade built on Scotch bonnet, thyme, allspice berry, scallion, and salt. The real ones cook it on a split oil drum for hours until the skin lacquers and the smoke embeds. Then ackee and saltfish (the national dish, eaten at breakfast — ackee is a fruit that looks like scrambled eggs and tastes faintly buttery), oxtail braised until the meat slips off, curry goat, festival (sweet fried dumplings), rice and peas cooked in coconut milk. Wash it down with a Red Stripe or sorrel.
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JP
Japan
Sushi is the export, but the Japan you'd want to eat in Japan is ramen at midnight at a counter that seats nine: tonkotsu broth that's been simmering for 18 hours, a slick of fragrant oil, a soft-boiled egg with a jammy yolk, slices of pork belly that fall apart in the spoon. Then izakaya plates with a beer — yakitori (chicken thigh, scallion, the cartilage cuts the menu doesn't translate), karaage fried chicken, agedashi tofu, edamame with sea salt. Nothing on the table is more than $9 and somehow you've spent two hours.
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JO
Jordan
Mansaf is not a meal, it's a ceremony. Lamb simmered for hours in jameed — a fermented, dried-yogurt broth with a tang that splits the room on first taste — ladled over a platter of saffron rice and flat shrak bread that soaks up everything. Topped with toasted almonds and pine nuts. Eaten traditionally with the right hand, standing, from a shared tray, with family. Alongside: maqluba (literally 'upside-down' — rice, chicken or lamb, and fried vegetables cooked in one pot and flipped onto the plate), fresh-baked shrak, and Arabic coffee with cardamom served in tiny cups that get refilled three times before anyone notices.
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MX
Mexico
Tacos al pastor is the answer, but the real answer is: you need both sides of a weekend. Saturday morning is barbacoa de borrego, consommé on the side, two tortillas deep. Saturday night is al pastor off a trompo — pork marinated in guajillo and achiote, shaved thin, a sliver of pineapple, cilantro, onion, done. Sunday is mole — poblano or negro — which takes a whole family a whole day to make and ruins every other chocolate sauce you'll ever have.
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MA
Morocco
Tagine is the answer everyone gives, and the answer is correct. The classic is lamb with prunes and almonds, slow-cooked in the conical clay pot the dish is named for, served with khobz to mop up everything. But the breakfast and post-match dish is harira — the tomato-lentil soup eaten to break the fast in Ramadan, dense with chickpeas and threads of lamb, finished with a squeeze of lemon. Get a side of msemen (flaky square pancake) and mint tea poured from three feet up. The pour is part of the dish.
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NL
Netherlands
Bitterballen — small fried meat-and-roux croquettes, served with mustard, eaten with a beer at 4pm and called borrelen, which roughly translates to 'the act of having a small drink with snacks while solving the world's problems.' The other essential is stroopwafels, two thin waffle cookies pressed around warm caramel — eat one over a cup of coffee so the steam softens the syrup. For dinner, stamppot: mashed potatoes mixed with kale or sauerkraut, a smoked sausage on top, comfort food engineered for the North Sea wind.
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NZ
New Zealand
The Kiwi meat pie is the sacred object — a palm-sized flaky pastry shell with steak-and-cheese or mince filling, eaten one-handed at a petrol station, a rugby match, or on the way into a soccer stadium. Sit-down-wise, roast lamb is the Sunday institution — New Zealand raises the best lamb on earth, and everyone involved knows it. Then the pavlova, a meringue dessert topped with cream and passionfruit or kiwifruit, which New Zealand and Australia will fight about ownership of until the end of time. The coffee, importantly: the flat white was invented here (depending on whom you ask, either in Wellington or Sydney; see the previous argument) and it is still the best in the English-speaking world.
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NG
Nigeria
Jollof rice is the dish that defines national pride and starts arguments — Nigerians and Ghanaians have been fighting about whose version is correct for as long as both nations have existed. Nigerian jollof: parboiled rice cooked in a tomato-pepper-onion base with smoky depth (some swear by a controlled scorch on the bottom of the pot called the bottom-pot). Then suya — beef skewered, dusted with yaji (a peanut-and-spice rub that is now sold in Whole Foods), grilled over open coal until the fat crisps. Then egusi soup with melon seeds and bitter leaf, served with pounded yam you eat with your right hand.
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NO
Norway
Norwegian food is built around what survives a long winter and a colder coast. The headliners: kjøttkaker (meatballs in brown gravy with lingonberry, the Sunday-dinner version of what IKEA serves), fårikål (slow-braised mutton and cabbage, the official national dish, which is just two ingredients and somehow works), and gravlaks — cured salmon with dill and mustard sauce that puts the standard American 'lox' to shame. Brunost, the brown caramelized whey cheese, is the divisive one. Norwegians put it on toast for breakfast and look at you like you're insane for asking why.
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PA
Panama
Sancocho is the dish — a slow-simmered chicken-and-yam soup with culantro (the long-leafed cousin of cilantro that's the secret of Panamanian cooking), served with a side of white rice you tip in halfway through. The other essentials: arroz con pollo done the Panamanian way (the rice cooked with the chicken stock, no shortcut), patacones (twice-fried smashed green plantains, salt only, perfect), and ceviche from a coastal cart with corvina, lime, red onion, and a paper cup. Breakfast is hojaldres — a fried-dough flatbread with eggs and cheese — and it is what every other country's morning pastry wishes it was.
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PY
Paraguay
Sopa paraguaya is the national dish, and the great joke of it is that it isn't soup — it's a dense, warm cornbread baked with sharp white cheese and onion, cut into squares and served alongside the actual soup. Then chipá: a small, chewy roll of cassava flour and queso Paraguay, sold hot from street baskets at every bus stop in Asunción and Ciudad del Este. The grilled meat ritual is asado on an asador vertical, beef salted heavily, served with mandioca (boiled cassava) instead of potatoes. Terere — iced yerba mate with cold water and crushed herbs — is the drink, and it's drunk from a cup called a guampa through a metal straw, and it's passed around the group.
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PE
Peru
Ceviche is the argument Peruvians will have with anyone who claims another country invented it. Raw white fish — corvina, if you can get it — 'cooked' in lime juice with red onion, rocoto chile, cilantro, and a splash of leche de tigre, the milky, electric marinade that's worth drinking from the bowl afterward. Eat it with choclo (giant Andean corn) and camote (sweet potato) and an Inca Kola that glows like a highlighter. The best ceviche in the world is a matter of national honor.
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PL
Poland
Pierogi are the gateway — half-moon dumplings filled with potato and farmer cheese (ruskie), or ground meat, or sauerkraut and mushroom, pan-fried in butter until the edges crisp, then finished with sour cream and caramelized onions. Next to that is bigos, the hunter's stew simmered for days — sauerkraut, fresh cabbage, sausage, smoked pork, sometimes a juniper berry or two, deeper and more savory every time it gets reheated. Then gołąbki (cabbage rolls stuffed with rice and meat), placki ziemniaczane (potato pancakes), żurek (sour rye soup with white sausage and a halved hard-boiled egg). Finish with a shot of Żubrówka bison-grass vodka, the way grandfathers in Kraków do.
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PT
Portugal
Bacalhau — salt cod, the national obsession — supposedly has 365 preparations, one for every day of the year. The two you need to know: bacalhau à brás (shredded with onions, matchstick fries, and scrambled eggs) and bacalhau com natas (baked with cream and potatoes, the comfort-food version). Then there's the francesinha, Porto's monument to excess: ham, sausage, steak, and melted cheese under a beer-and-tomato sauce that requires a fork. Finish with a pastel de nata, warm, dusted with cinnamon, espresso on the side.
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QA
Qatar
Machboos is the Qatari cousin of kabsa — basmati cooked in a broth built on black lime (loomi), cardamom, saffron, and tomato, finished with chicken or lamb that pulls apart with a spoon. What sets it apart is the loomi, which gives everything a slightly smoky, citrus-fermented note you don't get anywhere else. Finish with Arabic coffee (gahwa) spiced with cardamom and, if you're lucky, dates from Al Ahsa.
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SA
Saudi Arabia
Kabsa is the whole country on one platter. Long-grain basmati cooked in a spiced broth — black lime, cardamom, cloves, cinnamon — piled under a chicken or a lamb shoulder that's been slow-cooked until it falls off the bone. You eat it with your hands, from the same tray, with tomato-based daqoos on the side and Arabic coffee after. Nothing about it is quick.
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GB
Scotland
Haggis is the punchline; the actual meal is the steak pie or the fish supper. Haggis itself — sheep's offal, oats, onion, suet, packed in a casing and served with neeps and tatties (turnips and potato) — is closer to a savory holiday stuffing than the horror story it gets in American comedy. On a cold day in Glasgow it's perfect. The other essential is a proper bacon roll on a morning roll, brown sauce, no debate.
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SN
Senegal
Thiéboudienne — pronounced 'cheb-oo-jen,' literally 'rice and fish' — is Senegal's national dish, declared a UNESCO cultural heritage in 2021. It's fish stuffed with parsley and garlic, simmered with tomato paste and cassava and carrots, then served over jollof-style red rice that has absorbed every flavor in the pot. Eaten communally from a single platter with a spoon, with one hand. The other essentials: yassa poulet (chicken in caramelized onions and mustard) and bissap, a hibiscus drink the color of wine.
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RS
Serbia
Ćevapi are the gateway — small, skinless hand-rolled sausages of minced beef (sometimes beef-and-lamb), grilled fast over charcoal, served five or ten at a time inside warm lepinja flatbread with a heap of finely chopped raw onion and a smear of kajmak (a cultured dairy spread somewhere between clotted cream and fresh cheese). Next to that: pljeskavica, the oversized Balkan hamburger patty, seasoned the same way and grilled the same way. Sarma (stuffed sour cabbage), ajvar (roasted red pepper and eggplant relish the Serbs will argue about with any Macedonian or Bulgarian in earshot), and burek (a spiraled phyllo pastry with cheese or meat). Rakija, the fruit brandy, to finish. Don't sip it. Don't.
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ZA
South Africa
Bobotie is the national dish nobody outside South Africa knows about — spiced minced beef or lamb baked with a raisin-studded curry base and topped with a golden egg-and-milk custard, served with yellow rice and chutney. The Cape Malay heritage shows in the turmeric and cinnamon. Then there's the braai — South African barbecue, which is a verb, a noun, and a religion — boerewors sausage coiled in a spiral, lamb chops, pap (maize porridge) and chakalaka (a spicy vegetable relish) on the side. Bunny chow — a hollowed-out loaf of white bread filled with curry — is the Durban street-food classic. Biltong is the jerky. Rooibos is the tea. Castle Lager is the beer. You will be fed well.
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KR
South Korea
Korean BBQ is the obvious answer — galbi (marinated short rib over charcoal), samgyeopsal (thick-cut pork belly), the table grills, the lettuce wraps, the small army of banchan that arrives unannounced. But the underrated 2026 dish is *bibimbap*: rice, seasoned vegetables, an egg, gochujang, mixed at the table until it's the right color. And *kimchi-jjigae* — kimchi stew with pork and tofu, hangover food and home food at the same time. Order soju with any of it. Pour for someone else, never yourself.
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ES
Spain
Paella is the famous one — Valencian rice with chicken, rabbit, green beans, and saffron, cooked flat in a wide pan over fire so the bottom layer (the socarrat) crisps to caramel. Outside Valencia they put seafood in it and the locals will quietly judge you for it. The real soul of Spanish eating, though, is tapas: jamón ibérico de bellota sliced paper-thin, gambas al ajillo (shrimp in olive oil and garlic and a single red chili), patatas bravas, croquetas, a glass of Tempranillo, and a conversation that runs three hours longer than you planned.
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SE
Sweden
Köttbullar are the answer everyone expects and also the correct one — small, tender pork-and-beef meatballs in a rich cream gravy, with boiled potatoes, a spoonful of lingonberry jam on the side, and pickled cucumber if it's a proper table. Then gravlax (salt-and-sugar-and-dill-cured salmon, sliced paper-thin), kanelbullar (cardamom-heavy cinnamon buns eaten with coffee at 10 a.m. — the ritual is called fika and it is non-negotiable), and a shot of snaps (aquavit, 40% ABV, flavored with caraway) before midsummer lunch that you are supposed to sing through. Swedish food is simpler than its global reputation suggests. It's also better.
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CH
Switzerland
Fondue is the Americanized answer, and it's not wrong — a communal pot of melted Gruyère and Vacherin spiked with white wine and a little kirsch, cubes of crusty bread speared on long forks, rules enforced (lose your bread in the pot, you buy the next round). But the Swiss will tell you raclette is the real winter move: a half-wheel of cow's-milk cheese warmed under a grill, the molten top layer scraped directly onto boiled potatoes, cornichons, and pickled onions. And rösti — a single large potato pancake crisped in butter — is the breakfast-or-anytime Swiss grandmothers will fight over. Wash any of it down with a fendant from the Valais, if you can find one.
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TN
Tunisia
Couscous is the Friday institution — semolina steamed over a lamb-and-tomato stew heavy with chickpeas, carrots, turnips, and harissa that's been simmering long enough to soften the room. Then brik à l'oeuf: a paper-thin warqa pastry triangle folded around a raw egg and a spoon of tuna or spiced lamb, deep-fried fast enough that the yolk stays runny. Eating one without breaking the yolk all over yourself is a cultural rite of passage. The hot sauce is harissa, and the correct amount is more than you think.
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TR
Turkiye
Turkish breakfast (kahvaltı) is not a meal, it's a three-hour architectural project: a dozen small plates — olives black and green, cucumber and tomato still warm from the sun, white cheese, kaşar, honey and kaymak (clotted cream), a sucuk sausage sizzling in a copper menemen pan, a wicker basket of simit (sesame rings), fresh bread torn by hand, and black tea in tulip-shaped glasses refilled until you surrender. Then kebabs — not the fast-food kind: döner sliced from a vertical spit, adana from the grill, Iskender (döner over pide bread with tomato and melted butter) — mezze plates, baklava dense with pistachios, Turkish coffee thick enough to stand a spoon in, and rakı (aniseed spirit) turning cloudy white in the glass as you add water. You do not leave a Turkish table full. You leave it defeated.
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UY
Uruguay
Asado — yes, like Argentina, but Uruguayans will fight you about whose is better. The cut to know is *tira de asado* (short rib, cross-cut, slow over wood), eaten with chimichurri and a chorizo or morcilla on the side. Then *chivito*, the national sandwich — steak, ham, mozzarella, bacon, lettuce, tomato, fried egg, on a soft bun, eaten with a fork because there is no other choice. And mate. Always mate. The thermos under the arm is essentially a national identification card.
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US
USA
Burgers feel too easy, so here's the honest answer for the first truly global World Cup held on American soil: regional barbecue. In Texas that means brisket — Pecan Lodge or Goldee's on your off day, no exceptions. Everywhere else it's whatever the neighborhood owns: Philly cheesesteaks from Angelo's, Kansas City burnt ends from Joe's, Miami Cuban sandwiches from Versailles. The food story of this tournament is that America actually has dozens of food stories.
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UZ
Uzbekistan
Plov is a national instruction manual. Lamb or beef seared in rendered fat, then long-grain rice layered over a bed of grated yellow carrots and whole garlic cloves, cumin and barberries throughout, steamed in a cast-iron kazan over open flame until the grains are individually coated and the meat falls apart. Served on a communal platter, eaten with the right hand or a shallow spoon, with a tea glass of hot green kok choy to cut the richness. Alongside: manti (fist-sized lamb-and-onion dumplings steamed in stacked trays), shashlik (lamb skewers grilled over embers), non (round flatbread stamped with a chekich tool and pulled fresh from a tandir oven), and salads of tomato, cucumber, and red onion with fresh dill.
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DFW Restaurants by Nation
Find your team. Find their food. Locally.
- Algeria: Algerian-specific is rare in DFW — the closest reliable spot is Baboush on McKinney Avenue in Uptown Dallas, a Moroccan-Mediterranean kitchen where the tagine and the couscous are close cousins to what you'd get in Algiers. Ask for the merguez, order the mint tea, and request they put the match on — the Uptown staff are game. Kasbah Grill in Irving has closed, so Baboush is the play.
- Argentina: Corrientes 348 in the Dallas Arts District — wood-fired parrilla, the full mixed-grill parrillada for a table, and a wine list that actually takes Mendoza seriously. Reservations go fast on match days, and the staff will absolutely turn on the match for you.
- Australia: The Aussie Grind has two locations — the original cafe on Preston Road in Frisco (open all day, full Australian brunch with Eggs Benedict, lamingtons, ANZAC biscuits, and meat pies) and Aussie Grind Provisions in Farmers Branch (4887 Alpha Rd, the bakery side, daily fresh pies and sausage rolls until 3pm). The Frisco location stays open Friday nights — best bet for evening match watch parties. Coffee is the actual reason to go; everything else is the bonus.
- Austria: Kuby's Sausage House (6601 Snider Plaza, near SMU) is DFW's old-world answer — German-branded, but the menu is deeply Austrian-adjacent and the Kuby family has run the place since 1961 (the business itself traces back to 1728). Order the Jaeger schnitzel, Oma's potato pancakes, a plate of house-made bratwurst, and a Pilsner from the cold case. The catch is hours: breakfast and lunch only, Mon-Sat, 7am-2:30pm, so this is an early-match or group-stage brunch play. For evening matches, Bavarian Grill in Plano is the plan B — Austrian-style schnitzel, full German draft list, open nights.
- Belgium: The Old Monk on Henderson Avenue — technically an Irish pub, but the moules-frites are made the right way: Hoegaarden Belgian wit, shallots, celery, garlic, a basket of skinny fries on the side. It has been a neighborhood fixture for over 20 years, the bar gets it for matchday crowds, and the Belgian draft list is the deepest in the city.
- Bolivia: Patty's Kitchen is the only dedicated Bolivian operation in Dallas we've been able to confirm — a small, home-kitchen-style outfit that does authentic Bolivian food on an event-based schedule, with salteñas as the calling card. Follow their Facebook page for the next pop-up or catering drop. If that doesn't line up with match day, Warique in Arlington (Peruvian) overlaps enough on the ceviche-and-rice end of the spectrum to scratch the same itch. DFW is not a Bolivian town; this one takes a little planning.
- Bosnia & Herzegovina: Balkan Garden Bistro in Grapevine — same call as our Croatia and Serbia pages, and we know it. There's exactly one authentic Balkan kitchen at this end of Dallas, and this family-run bistro is it. Order the ćevapi plate and the burek; the owner will ask if you've had bosanska kahva before and make it the right way if you haven't. For groceries and proper Balkan bread, Eddie's EuroMart in Garland is the only real option in North Texas.
- Brazil: Texas de Brazil started in Addison and grew into a national chain, but the original-DFW location still does the rodízio service the way it's supposed to be done — gauchos walking the floor with skewers of picanha, costela, lamb, sausage, the whole rotation. Reservations on a match day are mandatory. The salad bar is unironically excellent. For something more casual, Boi Na Brasa in Plano serves a proper Saturday feijoada.
- Cameroon: Lola's Restaurant and Lounge at 3435 North Belt Line Road in Irving is the closest thing DFW has to a West African anchor — officially Nigerian in its billing, but the menu covers the broader West/Central African range that Cameroonians recognize, and the Cameroonian community in Irving gathers there regularly. For something more specifically Cameroonian, Connie's Kitchen (catering out of North Dallas, order by phone or Instagram) cooks ndolé, poulet DG, and braised fish for events and takeaway. Both are small operations run by people who left Douala and Yaoundé a decade or more ago. Call ahead.
- Canada: Maple Leaf Diner in Preston Valley — the Windsor-born owner moved here for his wife and built a corner of Ontario in north Dallas. The poutine is the real thing (one variation is a poutine-topped chicken-fried steak that they call 'the hangover cure'), and there are Nanaimo bars and butter tarts on the dessert board. Brunch-heavy, line-out-the-door on weekends — go early or go on a Wednesday.
- Cape Verde: Cape Verdean restaurants in DFW don't exist — the diaspora is concentrated in Boston and Rhode Island, not Texas. The nearest approximation is Portuguese-leaning: try Babalu Kitchen & Tapas in Plano for the salt-cod croquettes and the Portuguese wine list, or lean into the West African side and hit Angie Winners Kitchen in Grand Prairie for grilled fish and jollof that shares DNA with Cape Verdean cooking. If you have a Cape Verdean friend in DFW, ask them to make cachupa — that's the real play.
- Chile: Donde La Nino (9324 Chimney Corner, Dallas) is the actual thing — a small, family-run Chilean kitchen doing empanadas de pino, pastel de choclo, choripán, and fresh sopaipillas the way your abuela would make them. The menu is exactly as long as it needs to be and the ingredients are what matter. Not a big sit-down restaurant — more of a pickup-and-takeaway counter with some seats — but it's the only DFW spot where you can get the empanada with the raisin-olive-egg Chilean cosmology intact. Worth the drive.
- Colombia: DFW's Colombian scene is small but real. La Cacerola Colombian Restaurant and Sabor Latino are the most consistent sit-down options, and Zaguán Latin Café & Bakery in Oak Lawn does Colombian pastries — pandebono, almojábana, pan de yuca — that taste like Bogotá. For a true bandeja paisa, do the homework on Yelp the week of the match: the Colombian community in DFW is concentrated in Irving and northeast Dallas, and the best food often comes from family operations that don't advertise. The arepa truck scene has also exploded — search for Arepa TX and similar Instagram-only operations.
- Costa Rica: Honest answer: Costa Rican food is almost nonexistent in DFW. Your best bet is the Central American Salvadoran-Honduran corridor in Oak Cliff and northwest Dallas — pupuserías serving gallo pinto as a side, places like Mi Tierrita Taqueria y Pupusería on West Davis Street. For something closer to a Tico casado, look for any Honduran or Nicaraguan plate-lunch spot — the rice-and-beans foundation is shared across the region. El Gallo Pinto in Fort Worth (Instagram @elgallopintofw) does the right dish under the right name. Don't expect a pura vida vibe; expect family cooking from people who know exactly how to season black beans.
- Croatia: Balkan Garden Bistro in Grapevine — the closest authentic Balkan kitchen to DFW, with a ćevapi plate that D Magazine called the star of the menu. Owner-operated, family-run, the kind of place where the host knows what you should order if you've never had this food before. For Croatian deli ingredients and bread, Eddie's EuroMart in the Garland area is the only real source in North Texas.
- Curaçao: Real talk: there is no Curaçaoan restaurant in DFW. There is no Curaçaoan restaurant in Texas. For Dutch-Caribbean cooking, you'd need to fly to Amsterdam or Willemstad. Closest substitutes: Aldeez Afribbean Restaurant & Lounge in Dallas for the Caribbean-African overlap (jerk, oxtail, the spice profile is in the same family), Heroes Lounge for a proper reggae-bar match-day, or Caribbean Cabana downtown if you want something walkable. For the keshi-yena angle specifically, try ordering baked cheese at any Dutch-leaning European spot and improvise. Honest recommendation: find the Dutch consulate's watch party or a Curaçaoan diaspora meet-up on match day — there are more Curaçaoans in DFW than you'd think, and they will feed you.
- Czechia: DFW doesn't have a Czech restaurant proper — acknowledged gap. The closest authentic option is Czech Stop in West, TX (I-35, 90 miles south of Dallas), which every Texan of a certain age has stopped at for kolaches on a road trip, and which absolutely counts as a pilgrimage for a Czechia match weekend. In DFW proper, Pearl Snap Kolaches in Fort Worth (White Settlement and Hulen) does the Czech-Texan fusion version properly, including a bratwurst-and-kraut klobasnek. For beer: Kasa Czech & Slovak cuisine pops up at DFW beer halls occasionally — follow them for match-day events.
- Denmark: Real talk: Danish food barely exists in DFW. Three Danes Inn & Bakery in Fort Worth's Near Southside is the closest thing — a bed and bakery run by the Marks family, where Erna Marks moved from Denmark to Texas in the 1960s and her daughter Darlene still bakes from the family recipes. Hindbærsnitter (raspberry butter cookies), kanel snegle (cinnamon rolls the size of your hand), marzipan bars. Open Saturdays. For a sit-down meal, Royal Danish Bakery in Addison does pastries, breakfast, and open-faced sandwiches that are genuinely Danish in spirit.
- DR Congo: African Village Restaurant in Irving is the closest to authentically Congolese — they serve fufu and pondu proper, and the Congolese community in the metroplex (small but tight) shows up on weekends. For a broader pan-African option with a bigger menu, Aggie's African Restaurant on Skillman in Dallas is reliable. Little Lagos up in Irving is Nigerian, not Congolese, but the cassava-leaf and plantain dishes are adjacent enough that a Kinshasa expat will recognize the shelves.
- Ecuador: Ecuadorian-specific is rare in DFW — La Tierrita in Lewisville (verify hours) is the most-cited Ecuadorian spot in the metroplex, doing encebollado and ceviche the way coastal Ecuadorians want it. If they're closed or you can't make Lewisville, the workaround is a good Peruvian ceviche bar — Ecuadorian and Peruvian coastal food share the same DNA, and a Peruvian like Inca's Grill (Carrollton) will scratch the itch. Or commit fully and find a Colombian spot doing fish soups; encebollado has cousins all the way up the Pacific coast.
- Egypt: Mubrooka in Richardson — the first Egyptian restaurant in Texas. They do koshari the right way (proper portion, real garlic vinegar, the spicy red sauce on the side so you can ruin it yourself), ta'meya served hot, and ful that tastes like someone's grandmother made it. Order the koshari large; you will not regret it. For something more Mediterranean-broad if Mubrooka's full on a match day, Baboush in Dallas covers the room.
- England: The Londoner has three locations (Addison, Colleyville, downtown Dallas) and is the actual answer most British expats give. Hand-cut chips, cask ales, full English on weekends, and they will turn on whatever match you ask them to. Queens Head Pub is also opening in Deep Ellum in May — built specifically for the World Cup, with shepherd's pie and Scotch eggs on the menu — and might be the move if you want a brand-new room with no expat regulars guarding their stools.
- France: Bullion in downtown Dallas — chef Bruno Davaillon (formerly of the Mansion on Turtle Creek) cooks contemporary French brasserie food that the city took years to deserve. Order the duck à l'orange or the steak frites, sit at the bar, ask if they'll put on the match. They usually will. Worth the reservation.
- Germany: Bavarian Grill in Plano — full-service Bavarian restaurant on Premier Drive, schnitzels and schweinshaxe and a beer list that takes itself seriously. Live oompah on weekends, dirndls on the staff, the works. For a quicker fix, Kuby's Sausage House in Snider Plaza (since 1961) does a perfect schnitzel sandwich at lunch — but it closes at 2:30 and on Sundays, so plan around the match.
- Ghana: Angie Winners Kitchen in Grand Prairie is the play — authentic West African with Ghanaian roots, jollof and waakye both done properly, and a room that fills with the local Ghanaian community on weekends. For something more casual or delivery-friendly, Ghana Jollof DTX is exactly what it says on the can: jollof, waakye, fried plantain, banku with tilapia. Order with shito on the side. Bring napkins.
- Haiti: Perle des Antilles in Arlington (1522 E Abram St) — a Black-owned, women-owned Haitian restaurant and Caribbean market in a stretch of Arlington you might not expect. The griot is the order: tender pork in homemade epis, fried to order, with rice and beans and pikliz on the side. Also: tasso (fried goat), bouyon (the weekend soup), legume. Closed Mondays, open through dinner the rest of the week. If you're making one Haitian food trip this summer, make it this one.
- Honduras: HonduMaya Latin Cuisine (13531 Montfort Drive, near the Galleria) is DFW's standard-bearer for Honduran cooking — family-owned, run by Ethell Fajardo and Wilfredo Montes, and the baleadas come off the comal with the flour-tortilla-plus-crema geometry exactly correct. Add the pollo con tajadas (fried plantain slices) and the fresh seafood soup if it's on special. For a second option, San Pedro's Restaurante (off Harry Hines at NW Highway) does the breakfast baleada the way your tía would make it. Both will put the match on.
- Hungary: Armoury D.E. in Deep Ellum (2714 Elm St) is DFW's closest Hungarian touch — a restaurant-bar that leans Central European with an unapologetic focus on goulash, chicken paprikash, and lángos. The goulash is the traditional version: beef chuck, onions, peppers, celery root, real Hungarian paprika. The room is dim, tin-ceilinged, and appropriately bar-like, with a strong cocktail list and enough Unicum on the back bar to surprise you. Hungary is one of the harder food gaps to fill in DFW — the traveling-Hungarian diaspora is small here — so Armoury is genuinely the best option, not just a compromise.
- Iran: Kasra Restaurant in Richardson — one of the newer additions to DFW's Persian scene, drawing from the long-established Iranian community along the 75 corridor. The koobideh is textbook and the tahdig arrives in generous, shattering sheets. For a slightly more casual evening, Shiraz Mediterranean Grill on Coit in Dallas has been serving Iranian-born chef-owners' family recipes for years. Both are packed on weekends with Farsi being spoken at every table — that's the sign you've found the real thing.
- Iraq: Bilad Bakery & Restaurant near Richardson's Chinatown — the closest thing DFW has to a real Baghdad-neighborhood spot. Open-fire kebabs, proper samoon bread baked on the premises, and an owner who will tell you about the Tigris if you ask. For a larger spread, Al Baghdady Restaurant & Bakery in Dallas runs a full charcoal grill and a pastry case stacked with kleicha (the date-filled cookie Iraqis eat at every holiday). Both are small family operations — call ahead on match days.
- Italy: Partenope (Downtown Dallas, with a second location in Richardson) — Naples-born chef Dino Santonicola makes Neapolitan pizza that has been ranked in the top 15 in the U.S. four years running. The pasta program is just as serious. For a watch party with no actual matches to watch, this is where DFW's Italian-American crowd will be drowning their sorrows in carbonara and Aglianico through June and July. Sprezza in Oak Lawn is the second pick — modern Italian, daily-changing menu, the cacio e pepe is the move.
- Ivory Coast: Lola's Restaurant and Lounge (3435 N Beltline Rd, Irving) is the closest thing DFW has to an Ivorian kitchen — officially Nigerian-leaning Afropolitan, but the menu runs jollof, suya, goat pepper soup, and fried plantains with grilled fish that will read immediately to any West African. The room is warm, the Afrobeats-to-coupé-décalé ratio is correct, and the owners will absolutely put the match on if you ask. Call ahead on match days; Irving's Little Lagos corridor fills up.
- Jamaica: The Island Spot — locations in Carrollton and Oak Cliff, with another opening in Farmers Branch — is the family-run gold standard for Jamaican food in DFW. Jerk chicken marinated in Scotch bonnet and allspice the right way, oxtail that falls apart, plantains, and a back room that turns into a reggae party on weekend nights. Roland's Jamaican Chicken in Fair Park is the long-time neighborhood institution if you want the Dallas history.
- Japan: WAYA Japanese Izakaya on Gaston Avenue in East Dallas — a quiet residential block, the kind of place you walk past three times before finding. The ramen is the best in the city by most reckonings (the broth has the depth that comes from someone caring), and the small-plates menu reads like an actual Tokyo izakaya. For Plano, Yatai Ramen does the made-to-order bowls and serves a casual, family-friendly version of the same idea.
- Jordan: Madina Moroccan & Mediterranean Fusion on East Main in Richardson serves mansaf every Friday — a hard thing to find in Texas, and the closest thing DFW has to the real Friday-in-Amman experience. For the rest of the week, Afrah Mediterranean Restaurant (also on East Main, Richardson) runs a broader Levantine menu, open until midnight, the kind of place where a table of Jordanians, Palestinians, Lebanese, and Syrians are all eating the same shawarma and arguing about whose grandmother made it first. Both are walkable to each other on the same block.
- Mexico: El Come Taco in East Dallas (off Live Oak) for the al pastor — spinning trompo, thin corn tortillas, the kind of place where the line tells you it's right. For the mole and the full sit-down experience, Meso Maya (Uptown) — chef Nico Sanchez cooks it with pre-Columbian technique and the patience the dish actually requires.
- Morocco: Baboush in Dallas (Uptown and West Village) — a Lebanese-Moroccan fusion from veteran restaurateur Yaser Khalaf, where the lamb tagine and Moroccan mezze are the closest thing DFW has to Marrakech right now (Medina Oven & Bar in Victory Park closed in early 2024). For a more adventurous market-and-cafe experience, Darna at Legacy West in Plano is Marrakesh-inspired with tagines on the menu and a full North African pantry attached.
- Netherlands: LekkerbekTexas in Dallas is the actual Dutch answer — a small spot doing oliebollen, poffertjes (mini Dutch pancakes), and the original hot-served mega stroopwafel with homemade caramel. It's not a sit-down match-watching experience, more dessert-and-takeaway, but it is genuinely Dutch and run by Dutch people. For a proper sit-down match, The Old Monk in Knox-Henderson is the closest thing — Belgian-leaning, but Trappist beers, frites with mayo, and a soccer-friendly room.
- New Zealand: DFW does not have a Kiwi restaurant — the diaspora is small — so the move is The Aussie Grind (multiple locations, best is the Frisco flagship on Preston Road, with a second at 4887 Alpha Rd in Farmers Branch). Australian-owned, but the menu fully covers the shared Oceanic culinary space: proper meat pies, sausage rolls, lamingtons, ANZAC biscuits, and flat whites that will make you reconsider everything you thought you knew about coffee. The Frisco location stays open for Friday matches. For the lamb side of the Kiwi experience, any DFW steakhouse with a serious rack-of-lamb on the menu (Bob's, Knife, or Chamberlain's) will get the job done.
- Nigeria: Lola's Restaurant and Lounge on North Belt Line Road in Irving — widely considered the No. 1 African restaurant in DFW, sitting in the heart of the metroplex's tight-knit Nigerian community. The jollof is correct, the suya is correct, and on weekends the back room turns into a party. For a quicker hit, Suyastop and Street Suya nearby specialize in suya the way it should be made.
- Norway: DFW does not have a Norwegian restaurant. It barely has a Scandinavian one. Your honest options: Taste of Scandinavia (a European-style bakery that does Nordic pastries), the Smörgåsbørd Sandwich Table at the Dallas Farmers Market (weekends only, smørrebrød the way Copenhagen does it), and — yes — the IKEA in Frisco. The IKEA cafe does serve Swedish meatballs and lingonberry, which is close enough to Norwegian that any Norwegian fan will smirk and order them. We will keep looking.
- Panama: Real talk: there isn't a Panamanian restaurant in DFW. The only proper Panamanian spot in the entire state of Texas is Rincón de Panamá in Killeen, which is two hours south. Closest substitutes in the metroplex: Sabor Latino in Dallas (Colombian-Latin, but they understand patacones and sancocho), Zaguán Latin Café in Oak Cliff for Colombian arepas and a Pan-Latin menu, and the Empanada Cookhouse for the empanada angle. The Panamanian Association of DFW (padfw on Facebook) often hosts watch-party potlucks — that's the actual move.
- Paraguay: DFW doesn't have a Paraguayan restaurant — the diaspora is too small — so the call is Corrientes 348 in the Dallas Arts District. It's Argentine, but the South American parrilla tradition is the one Paraguay shares most closely: wood-fired beef, mixed grill for the table, chimichurri, the parrillero walking out with skewers. For the chipá and sopa paraguaya side of Paraguayan cooking, your best bet is the Hispanic bakery counter at El Rancho Supermercado in Irving, where someone is almost certainly making something close to it for the neighborhood. Reservations at Corrientes go fast on match days.
- Peru: Warique Peruvian Restaurant on Matlock Road in Arlington — a half-dozen kinds of ceviche, a stage for the live cumbia band that plays weekend evenings, and Peruvian football on the big screen from the moment they unlock the door. The leche de tigre comes on the side in a shot glass. Go on a Saturday, order the ceviche mixto and a pisco sour, and let the room do what it does.
- Poland: Taste of Poland European Tavern on Preston Road in Plano is the full sit-down experience — pierogi made that morning, bigos that tastes like it's been stewing since last Tuesday (because it has), schnitzel big enough to share, and a Polish beer list (Tyskie, Żywiec, Okocim) that takes itself seriously. For takeaway pierogi to bring to a watch party, Pierogi Polskie in Dallas makes them by the dozen in ruskie, meat, and sauerkraut-mushroom varieties. The matriarchs who run both places have Polish as a first language. That's usually the sign.
- Portugal: DoceHaven (Dallas) is the closest thing DFW has to a Lisbon café — a Portuguese bakery doing pastéis de nata to order, plus seasonal bolo de arroz and quiches. Pickup and delivery only, but worth the planning. For the savory side, The Port of Peri Peri (multiple DFW locations) does the Portuguese-via-Mozambique chicken with proper piri-piri heat. DFW does not have a proper Portuguese restaurant. Match-day fix: pastéis from DoceHaven, peri-peri to follow.
- Qatar: Fadi's Mediterranean Grill on Knox Street in Dallas — halal Lebanese that runs the kind of rice-and-slow-cooked-lamb platters that get you 80% of the way to a proper machboos, in a room friendly to big groups on a match day. DFW doesn't have a dedicated Qatari spot (it's a country of 300,000 citizens, so fair enough). Fadi's is the honest substitute: the kabsa-style plates are on the regular menu, the bread is warm and constant, and the Knox-Henderson location makes it easy to build an afternoon around.
- Saudi Arabia: Afrah Mediterranean in downtown Richardson — technically a Lebanese restaurant, but the Gulf-style rice-and-lamb platters land here as well as anywhere in DFW, and the family that runs it has been doing this on East Main Street since 2002. The buffet runs weekday lunch, the bakery case is worth an extra 20 minutes, and the neighborhood around it is the center of gravity for North Texas's Arab American community. Call ahead on a match day.
- Scotland: The Londoner has four DFW locations (Addison, Mockingbird Station, Colleyville, and a new Arlington spot opening near AT&T Stadium for the World Cup) — British rather than Scottish-specific, but it's the closest thing DFW has to a proper Saturday-morning football pub, and the staff will absolutely put Scotland on. For pure Scotch credibility on a non-match day, Henry's Majestic in Knox-Henderson has one of the deepest single-malt lists in Texas.
- Senegal: Senegalese-specific is genuinely hard in DFW — the West African community here skews Nigerian and Ghanaian. Seinyaa Kitchen on Forest Lane (Dallas) is the closest pan-West-African answer — jollof rice, attieke, suya, goat pepper soup, with a kitchen that knows what it's doing. For an evening, Lola's Restaurant and Lounge in Irving (3435 N Belt Line Rd) does Nigerian and pan-African food with proper sit-down energy. Neither is doing thiéboudienne on a Tuesday, but ask — both have done special orders for African match days before.
- Serbia: Balkan Garden Bistro in Grapevine — a real Eastern European bistro in a Texas strip mall, run by a Bosnian family, serving proper ten-piece ćevapi plates with lepinja, kajmak, and onions that taste the way they should. The menu also covers Serbian staples like ćufte (meatballs in tomato sauce) and musaka (the Balkan version, not the Greek). For takeaway supplies, Eddie's EuroMart on Harry Hines in Dallas stocks imported Serbian ingredients — Pljeskavica patties, kajmak, Smoki peanut puffs, rakija — for a proper home watch party. The nearest Serbian-specific restaurant is a long drive; the Balkan is close enough.
- South Africa: Nando's Peri-Peri opened its first Texas location in Addison in December 2023 — the Portuguese-South African chicken chain that every South African expat in DFW has been waiting for. It's not bobotie and it's not a proper braai, but the peri-peri marinade is right, the medium-hot is actually medium-hot, and the chicken is exactly what it should be. For biltong and boerewors and actual groceries to take home, Quick Shop in Dallas is the South African-British-Kenyan store that stocks everything Afrikaans. Anton's African Cuisine in Roanoke serves biltong on the menu and is worth the drive if you're already north.
- South Korea: Carrollton's Old Denton Road corridor is the largest Koreatown between LA and Atlanta, and the move on a match day is Bros Korean BBQ — Dallas's first all-you-can-eat Korean BBQ, dry-aged cuts, banchan that keeps coming, and a crowd that will absolutely be wearing red. For a quieter sit-down: Tto Tto Wa Bistro for fried chicken and proper kimchi-jjigae. Both are in the Carrollton K-town cluster — go early, the line on a weekend can hit 90 minutes.
- Spain: Café Madrid, on Travis Street in Dallas, is the family-run institution — paella that's actually paella, gambas al ajillo, fried calamari, and a wine list with 85 Spanish bottles that have been recognized by Wine Spectator. For tapas in Fort Worth, Sí Tapas in the Cultural District does the small-plate spread with a real Iberian touch. Either is the right call for a Spain match watch party.
- Sweden: DFW's Swedish options are slim — acknowledged gap. The Wooden Spoon in Plano (14902 Preston Rd) is a Scandinavian market and café carrying Swedish groceries, candy, kanelbullar, and the full IKEA-but-actually-good meatball experience. They do a proper fika in the afternoon. And yes, IKEA Frisco has meatballs and lingonberry soda in the café for less than $6 — the tongue-in-cheek answer that is also the accurate one for match-day weekends when you need Swedish food and a parking lot big enough for 10,000 cars.
- Switzerland: Simply Fondue has locations in both Dallas (on Lower Greenville) and Fort Worth (West 4th Street), and they are the only restaurants in the region that take fondue seriously as a four-course meal — cheese, salad, meat-and-seafood, chocolate. The traditional Gruyère-Emmenthaler blend is the Swiss pick. Swiss-specific restaurants in DFW essentially don't exist; this is the closest thing, and it's genuinely good. For raclette, you'll have to make it at home — Central Market carries the half-wheels.
- Tunisia: Baboush in West Village is the closest DFW gets to a proper North African kitchen — the restaurant was born inside a small marketplace in Marrakesh, and the Moroccan-Mediterranean menu overlaps deeply with Tunisian home cooking. Order the mezze spread family-style, the lamb tagine, and whatever couscous they have on. The room has the low-lit, tiled, brass-lantern energy of a souk café, and the cocktails are better than they need to be. For a more casual alternative, Afrah Mediterranean in Richardson does a strong harissa-forward mezze at lunch.
- Turkiye: Cafe Istanbul in Plano (1915 N Central Expwy) has been serving real Turkish food to DFW for 18 years — lahmacun that the Infatuation called the best in North Texas, a full mezze spread, and the only restaurant in the area licensed to pour Turkish rakı. Belly dancing Friday and Saturday nights at 9 p.m., which is more tournament-weekend than it sounds. For a second option, Turkish Cafe & Lounge (also Plano) does excellent Iskender kebab and proper Turkish coffee in a copper cezve.
- Uruguay: Honest answer: there's no Uruguayan restaurant in DFW, period. The closest cultural cousin is Corrientes 348 (Dallas Arts District) — Argentine parrilla, but the wood-fired tira de asado, the chimichurri, and the wine list will all read very familiar to a Uruguayan palate. (For Argentina's profile we sent you here too — share a table.) For lunch, Empa Mundo (multiple locations) does respectable empanadas and serves dulce de leche desserts that scratch the itch. Bring your own mate gourd.
- USA: Pecan Lodge in Deep Ellum — brisket that made this city internationally respectable at barbecue, plus a patio big enough for a proper watch party. Show up by 10:30am for lunch or plan to queue. The Trough (the Johnny-Football-sized sampler platter) feeds three adults.
- Uzbekistan: Bubala Cafe & Grill on Preston Road in Far North Dallas is the move — an Uzbek-Russian family operation with plov, manti, samsa, and a weekend scene that includes live music and belly dancing. The plov ($17.99, beef) arrives steaming on brown rice with shredded beef and sweet Uzbek carrots; the D Magazine review called it a revelation. For a more casual weekday visit, Rokhat Grill on North Central Expressway in Plano does plov, kebabs, and manti in a smaller family-run room with halal meats. Both are rare finds — Central Asian food barely exists in most American cities, and DFW has two genuine options inside ten miles.