Romanian Food, What is Romanian Food Like? (2024)

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Want to find out about traditional Romanian Food?Romanian food is not just meat and potatoes and it’s absolutely delicious, drawing on many influences through history. We were really happily surprised by traditional Romanian foods when we first arrived in Bucharest over 4 years ago.We immediately hunted down as many Romanian dishes as we could, eager, as always, to find the real food of the country not the multinational cuisine on offer in this modern city. What dishes should you try in Romania? Use our guide to some of the best foods in Romania.

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Romanian Food in Romania

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Bucharest is bursting with bars and eateries, you can eat pizza, tapas, Thai, Mexican, anything you like, but we wanted to taste Romania.

We found it in the capital and also in the remote Romanian village that we called home for the next 3 years. I’ve cooked and eaten with farmers, shepherds and mothers, these are the dishes we loved most in Romania.

We visited Romania and fell in love back in 2015. We’ve spent most of our time there since, trying to integrate into an incredible rural village in Maramures County.

But that is another story, back to the food.

Since those first few restaurant meals in Bucharest we’ve eaten many home-cooked, delicious Romanian feasts, usually in small hotels, but sometimes in village homes from the big cities to rural Maramures.

Romanian food is good, hearty, stick to your ribs stuff and packs a powerful flavour punch.

I have even taken a Romanian cooking class or two, from housewives, the real experts, happy to share the Romanian foods of their childhoods. Cooking classes and food tours are a great way to learn about Romania.

Being a vegetarian in country Romania is hard, just about all of the traditional dishes are meat-based.

Being a vegan is even harder, milk, butter, sour cream and cheeses are big players too.

If you have a dairy allergy you could struggle with eating out, but my wife found that she could eat the goat and sheep’s milk cheeses available in Romania.

That said, Romanians sometimes take a meat-free fast prior to religious festivals (Easter) , so vegetarian dishes do appear on local menus.

Romanian Food

Romanian food is diverse and full of flavour. Expect meat, mostly pork, fresh trout, good cheeses and dairy products, homemade preserves, polenta, paprika and chillies.

Romanian food has something for everyone, even vegetarians. Below, we list some traditional Romanian food and dishes to look out for.

Romanian Soups

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This part of the world produces some fabulous soups.

Romania is rather fond of tripe so tripe soup, ciorbă de burtă, often appears. I’ve tried it, the soup is great, but I can’t eat tripe ona regular basis. It’s just not for me but a lot of Romanians love it.

Look out forCiorbă de perişoare, meatball soup and ciorbă ţărănească,vegetable soup, with or without meat.

Goulash soup is common in Romanian cuisine too, and extremely good.

Romanian Food, Main Course Dishes

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The pig is the king of the Romanian table. As Christmas approaches the pig slaughters happen daily here in the country. Housewives will be busy preserving pork and pig fat ( Slanina) and preparing sausages and other tasty treats.

Easter is the only time you really see lamb on the menu, spring lambs are stuffed whole with offal, eggs and onions to make traditional Easter lamb.

Try Tocaniţă (or tochitură) , a tasty meat stew.

Meat-freeghiveci de legume can contain over 20 vegetables cooked in oil. (ghiveci recipe here)

My favourite dish, sarmale, pickled cabbage leaves stuffed with a mixture of minced meat and rice then braised in a pot. Yor sarmale usually comes with a dollop of sour cream (smetana), a serve of polenta and a crisp fresh or pickled chilli.

Romanian Desserts

Papanaşi are like doughnuts filled with sour cream and topped with fruit preserve.
Clătite cu brânză are crepes filled with cottage cheese, raisins and spices.
Cozonac is rather like stollen. It’s atraditional holiday sweet bread, rolled and filled with walnuts, poppy seeds or cream cheese. You’ll see this in the supermarkets, but homemade is better.

Romanian Breakfast

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Some hotel and pensiunea breakfasts have been outstanding, like this one in Maramures, featuring dairy products straight from the cow, homemade jam, honey, tomatoes, cucumbers and a hot dish.

Others have been rather average, processed cheese and sausages. It’s well worth hunting down hotels with great breakfasts.

There isn’t really a standard Romanian breakfast but you could expect to eat mamaliga ( polenta) in country areas with various accompaniments. In the cities busy urbanites grab pastries such as covrigi (Romanian fresh-baked pretzels).

If anything is typical as a breakfast in Romania it would be good bread, butter, jam, cheeses, cold meats and sliced tomato and cucumber.

Romanian Food Accompaniments

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Just about any Romanian dish can be enhanced by a dollop of sour cream (smantana). Expect to see a green chili on the side of your plate too, either fresh and crispy or pickled.

Romanian food is not spicy but hot peppers or chilies are commonly eaten on the side or a Romanian main meal.

You will see a lot of pickled vegetables, traditionally summer’s vegetable harvest had to be preserved for the harsh winters, you’ll still see that tradition in restaurants, markets and stores in Romania.

Mustard is an art form in Romania, but don’t be surprised to also see tomato ketchup, either sweet (dulce) or picante.

Romanian Street Foods

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On the streets and in country markets you will usually be able to find a stall cooking mititei or mici (the name means little ones or little boys). Order a plate of these tasty skinless sausages along with a slab of bread and a huge dollop of mustard. These are one of the best Romanian foods to try and you should be able to find them easily.

Our homemade recipe for mititei or mici (Romanian skinless sausages) is here.

Placinta, (from the Latin word, placenta, cake) came to Romania with the Romans. It’s a pastry or cake that can come sweet or savoury. My boys like it with Nutella, I like it with sheep’s cheese (telemea, similar to feta).

Kurtoskalacs, (or chimney cake) stalls can be found at markets, on the ski slopes, even outside most supermarkets. These tall cylinders of sweet yeasty dough can also be found in Hungary.

Useful Romania Information

The farm home stay we mention for good home cooking is this one, Pensiunea Maramures, in Maramures County, near Ocna and Breb, it was great to feed their cows and watch them milking and making tuica

The home stay/ guesthouse/ hostel we used in Bucharest is this one, Swallows Villa, it has private family rooms with en-suite.

We recommend using Booking.com to search for your accommodation in Romania and a Lonely Planet Romania Guide Book, you may need some assistance from their language section.

We generally fly into Romania using Wizz Air, but check prices, best deals and availability first.

Other Traditional Romanian Ingredients and Dishes

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One Romanian dish I have to mention is what we call “pig fat on a stick”, to our Romanian friends and neighbours it is Slanina and is much loved. To see how it is prepared and served, see our post on lunch in the tuica shed.

It makes an appearance at every Romanian BBQ or cookout. Sometimes they eat Slanina raw with crisp onions. I pull the vegetarian card for this one!

To see the slabs of pig fat coming off the pig, you need our post on pig butchery and slaughter.

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Trout is a Romanian speciality and a Romanian food found is specialist restaurants, look out for Pastravaria as you drive the mountain roads. This restaurant, Pastravaria Alex in Maramures, was superb and was conveniently near Breb, Brasov or Ocna Sugatag.

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Sheep and goats make cheese in Romania. You will see these large cheeses at country markets.

The other ubiquitous taste of Romania is telemea, a white feta-type cheese that comes in cow, goat or sheep varieties. This one you’ll find easily on supermarket shelves. This is one flavour of Romania that we miss almost daily.

Sour cream, smantana, a yogurt-like thick creamy preparation is best from the farms where wives produce it straight from fresh cows’ milk. You’ll find this as an accompaniment for almost anything and as a basis of sauce usteroi, garlic sauce.

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This is just the start of our posts about traditional Romania food, there are many more to come, including those on wines, cheeses and traditional ingredients. Sign up to read more about Romanian foods to try and where to find them.

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Please check out our Pinterest account for loads of food and recipes from around the world!

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