Quantifying culinary diversity across countries.

Compare countries

Brazilian vs Swedish food & cuisine

Compare
Flag
Flag
Brazil

VS

Sweden

In Brazil, people consume about 1942 g of food per day, with produce taking the biggest share at 30%, and fish and seafood coming in last at 1%. In Sweden, the daily total is around 2270 g, with produce leading at 34% and fish and seafood at the bottom with 4%.

Brazil

Sweden

The average Brazilian daily plate size is

The average Swedish daily plate size is

1942 g.
2270 g.
Icon

Grains

Icon

Fish and seafood

Icon

Produce

Icon

Eggs and dairy

Icon

Meats

Icon

Sugar, fats and nuts

At a Brazilian table, it’s not fancy dishes but reliable basics: grains, beans, cassava, fruits, and coffee. Rice and beans appear at almost every meal, forming the foundation. Meat like beef, chicken, or fish is added, though it rarely dominates. Churrascarias with endless grilled meats draw attention abroad, but everyday cooking leans more on vegetables, grains, and plant-based dishes.

Read more

Traditional Swedish cuisine centers on using what’s available. It developed in a cold climate with long winters, which made preservation essential. Flavors stay clean and restrained. Ingredients lead, not technique or display. Despite modern eating habits and global influences, traditional dishes still play a role in everyday meals. The cuisine relies heavily on cultured dairy, crisp and soft breads, potatoes, berries, beef, pork, chicken, eggs, and seafood.

Read more
Icon

Grains 341 G

WHEAT

148 G

RICE

103 G

CORN

78 G

BARLEY

0 G

RYE

0 G

OATS

11 G

MILLET

0 G

SORGHUM

0 G

OTHER CEREALS

1 G

Icon

Grains 327 G

WHEAT

260 G

RICE

27 G

CORN

6 G

BARLEY

4 G

RYE

24 G

OATS

5 G

MILLET

0 G

SORGHUM

0 G

OTHER CEREALS

1 G

On the daily Brazilian table, grains are the quiet constants. Rice is a staple, lightly seasoned and boiled, almost always paired with beans for a complete, nourishing base.

Corn is especially important in the Northeast. Brazil may be famous for rice, corn, beans, and cassava, but wheat, mainly as bread, is the true daily staple.

Read more

Swedish bread fits within Nordic bread culture but stands out for its wide use of grains. Wheat was never dominant on its own. Rye, barley, and oats are just as important, often mixed with wheat and baked into dense whole-grain sourdough loaves.

Read more
Icon

Produce 583 G

PULSES

34 G

VEGETABLES

135 G

STARCHY ROOTS

144 G

FRUITS

270 G

SEA PLANTS

0 G

Icon

Produce 781 G

PULSES

5 G

VEGETABLES

373 G

STARCHY ROOTS

161 G

FRUITS

204 G

SEA PLANTS

0 G

Potatoes, sweet potatoes, and yams are everyday staples, introduced by the Portuguese in the 16th century, but they never rivaled corn or cassava. Cassava remains the most important starchy root, high in carbohydrates but low in protein, it is deeply embedded in Brazilian food culture. Cassava appears as farinha (toasted meal), tapioca, or farofa, a coarse side dish that absorbs added flavors and often accompanies beans, meats, or rice. Cassava is a defining texture and flavor of Brazilian cuisine.

Read more

Traditionally, vegetables were secondaryrole in Swedish cuisine compared to meat, fish, and dairy. The northern climate limited options, so cooking relied on hardy turnips, rutabagas, cabbage, and preserved produce. With modern agriculture, economic growth, and health awareness, vegetables now appear more often on Swedish plates.

Read more
Icon

Meats 283 G

POULTRY

133 G

PORK

37 G

BEEF

98 G

MUTTON AND GOAT

2 G

OTHER MEAT

1 G

OFFALS

12 G

Icon

Meats 206 G

POULTRY

43 G

PORK

78 G

BEEF

62 G

MUTTON AND GOAT

3 G

OTHER MEAT

1 G

OFFALS

19 G

Cattle, brought by the Portuguese, adapted well to Brazil’s grasslands and climate, spreading inland and turning the country into one of the world’s largest beef producers. Brazilians make use of nearly every cut — ribs, tails, organ meats.  Meat carries cultural weight, from backyard barbecues to churrascarias serving endless skewers of beef, sausages, and chicken hearts. Picanha, grilled simply with coarse salt and its fat cap intact, is especially iconic — a once-overlooked cut that Brazilians turned into a national favorite.

Read more

Pork and beef are everyday staples, appearing in sausages, stews, and Swedish meatballs. They also anchor practical classics such as pytt i panna, a hash of meat, potatoes, and onions topped with a fried egg, and kalops, a slow-cooked beef stew with onion, bay leaf, and allspice. Pork features widely, from crispy pork with potato pancakes to yellow pea soup and cured or baked Christmas ham.

Read more
Icon

Fish and seafood 22 G

FISH

20 G

SEAFOOD

2 G

Icon

Fish and seafood 86 G

FISH

64 G

SEAFOOD

22 G

Fish and seafood are key proteins regionally, in the North and rivery Amazon region, where species like tambaqui, pirarucu, and tucunaré often replace red meat. Along the Atlantic coast, Afro-Brazilian traditions highlight seafood with coconut milk, dendê oil, and peppers. Portuguese influence also endures through salted cod (bacalhau), which is still quite popular during festivals.

Having a long history of living near extensive marine and freshwater coasts, Swedish people are skilled in preparing seafood. Fishing thrives in coastal communities, providing high-quality cod, mackerel, arctic char, salmon, herring, and many others.

Icon

Eggs and dairy 457 G

EGGS

35 G

MILK AND DAIRY

413 G

ANIMAL FATS

9 G

Icon

Eggs and dairy 668 G

EGGS

37 G

MILK AND DAIRY

590 G

ANIMAL FATS

41 G

Milk and dairy are a part of daily life: many Brazilians drink milk with coffee at breakfast or in the evening. Cheese in Brazil is less about aged (like in Europe), but more about fresh and mild varieties. Fresh white cheeses queijo minas or coalho are part of breakfast spreads, stuffed into breads.

Read more

Gravlax, Sweden’s cured salmon dish, when fish is buried in salt, sugar, and dill, the critical herb in gravlax. Curing typically lasts 24 to 48 hours, allowing the fish to take on a delicate, rich flavor without cooking. It’s served cold and thinly sliced, accompanied by mustard sauce hovmästarsås, rye bread, or crispbread. Gravlax has become popular worldwide.

Herring is most often eaten pickled, with potatoes, onions, and mustard sauce. Smoked herring is also common. There’s also a surströmming, a fermented herring known for its strong, pungent smell – a delicacy by many Swedes, but it is not for the faint of heart!

Icon

SUGARS, FATS AND NUTS 256 G

NUTS

2 G

SWEETENERS

111 G

SUGAR CROPS

43 G

VEG OILS

67 G

OILCROPS

33 G

Icon

SUGARS, FATS AND NUTS 202 G

NUTS

27 G

SWEETENERS

112 G

SUGAR CROPS

0 G

VEG OILS

43 G

OILCROPS

20 G

Nuts in cuisine are not as central, although the country is home to the famous Brazil nut (castanha-do-pará). It’s less of an everyday kitchen ingredient and more of a symbol sold at markets, eaten plain, or exported. Another important one is the cashew nut. Both the nut and the cashew fruit (caju) are used – the nut in sweets, savory dishes, or as a snack, and the fruit in juices and desserts. In Afro-Brazilian cuisine, particularly in Bahia, peanuts are more important. They’re ground into creamy bases along with coconut milk and palm oil. Peanuts also feature sweets.

Read more
Icon

Herbs

CILANTRO

JAMBU

OREGANO

BAY LEAVES

PARSLEY

CHIVES

DILL

Brazil
Common
Sweden

CILANTRO

JAMBU

OREGANO

BAY LEAVES

PARSLEY

CHIVES

DILL

Icon

Spices

ANNATTO/ACHIOTE

CINNAMON

CUMIN

PAPRIKA

BLACK PEPPER

CLOVES

NUTMEG

ALLSPICE

CARAWAY

DILL SEED

GREEN CARDAMOM

JUNIPER BERRIES

LICORICE

WHITE PEPPER

Brazil
Common
Sweden

ANNATTO/ACHIOTE

CINNAMON

CUMIN

PAPRIKA

BLACK PEPPER

CLOVES

NUTMEG

ALLSPICE

CARAWAY

DILL SEED

GREEN CARDAMOM

JUNIPER BERRIES

LICORICE

WHITE PEPPER

Icon

Aromatics

BELL PEPPERS

CHILI PEPPERS

LIME

SPRING ONION

GARLIC

ONION

CARROT

DRIED MUSHROOMS

Brazil
Common
Sweden

BELL PEPPERS

CHILI PEPPERS

LIME

SPRING ONION

GARLIC

ONION

CARROT

DRIED MUSHROOMS

Icon

Condiments

ACHIOTE PASTE

CANE VINEGAR

COCONUT MILK

PALM OIL

SUGARCANE MOLASSES

TUCUPI

BLEAK ROE

BUTTER

CREAM

CRÈME FRAÎCHE 

FRUIT VINEGAR

HORSERADISH

MAYONNAISE

MUSTARD

SOUR CREAM

Brazil
Common
Sweden

ACHIOTE PASTE

CANE VINEGAR

COCONUT MILK

PALM OIL

SUGARCANE MOLASSES

TUCUPI

BLEAK ROE

BUTTER

CREAM

CRÈME FRAÎCHE 

FRUIT VINEGAR

HORSERADISH

MAYONNAISE

MUSTARD

SOUR CREAM

Brazil

SEASONINGS

The Brazilian approach toward flavoring is gentle, layered, and ingredient-driven. Brazilians rely on freshness and repetition: garlic, cilantro, parsley, scallions, dendê oil, coconut milk, and sometimes a touch of chili. One of the biggest misconceptions about Brazilian food is the spiciness – food is usualy not spicy. Where heat does come in is mostly regional. In Bahia, Afro-Brazilian cuisine uses pimenta malagueta, but even there, the heat is balanced.

Brazilian food never developed the vast spicing visible in some neighboring Latin American cuisines. Portuguese traders brought cinnamon, cloves, nutmeg, and black pepper, but still these are not used extensively; Portugal’s restrained style repeats.

In the Northeast, Afro-Brazilian cuisine highlights dendê oil, malagueta chili, and cumin, often balanced with coconut milk and lime. In the Southeast, garlic and parsley dominate, with cumin used more selectively in beans and stews. In the Amazon, cooks rely on annatto for color, tucupi (fermented cassava juice) for depth, and jambu, a tingling herb, for its unique sensation.

Jambu is one of those ingredients that instantly says Amazon. It’s a leafy green that gives your mouth a little tingle and numbness – almost like a mild electric buzz. It’s not common across all of Brazil, but in the North it’s iconic.

Brazilian cuisine doesn’t rely on premade spice mixes. Still, some seasoning bases are so common:

TEMPERO BAIANO – The closest to a true ‘spice mix’, made of cumin, coriander, dried chili, black pepper, turmeric, dried oregano, bay leaf, and sometimes nutmeg. Used in stews, beans, and poultry.

CHEIRO VERDE  is Brazil’s fresh herb mix, consisting of parsley and green onions. Sometimes cilantro replaces or joins parsley. This fresh mix is added at the end of cooking or as a garnish.

SAUCES

REFOGADO,  similar to Spanish sofrito or French mirepoix –  not exactly the sauce, but a flavor base of onions, garlic, and sometimes peppers sautéed in oil. A start to many Brazilian dishes.

CHIMICHURRI BRASILEIRO – Inspired by Argentina, but with more cilantro. Made of parsley, cilantro, garlic, chili, vinegar, oil, and paired with grilled meats.

Sweden

SEASONINGS

Simplicity in seasoning, freshness, quality of ingredients, and extended cooking time are the keywords to describe the essence of Swedish flavorings. Flavors are mild, clean, and balanced, with dishes mainly using salt, pepper, and dill.

Dill is a key herb in Swedish cuisine, used for everything from seafood to potatoes. Rosemary quite often features meat marinades, but its more of a modern addition rather than a staple herb.

Juniper berries are popular to season meats, sauces, and marinades. They are also a crucial ingredient in the production of Swedish gin and aquavit. White pepper is often used instead of black pepper, especially in sauces, stews, and meatballs. Mustard is a significant condiment for sauces, dressings, and pickling, particularly the pickled herring. Cream and sour cream are very central in hearty sauces.

ALLSPICE AND PEPPER MIX often a blend of allspice and white or black pepper, this spice mix is used in meatballs, sausages, and stews.

PICKLING SPICE MIX is used for pickling herring, cucumbers, and vegetables. It usually includes mustard seeds, dill seeds, allspice, bay leaves, and sometimes cloves.

DILL AND MUSTARD SAUCE, made with mustard, dill, vinegar, sugar, and oil, is served with gravlax, its sweetness, acidity, and herbaceousness is a staple in Swedish seafood dishes.

LINGONBERRY JAM is a crucial condiment, served with meatballs, potato dishes, and game.

BLEAK ROE (löjrom) is a local delicacy known for its briny, delicate flavor and orange color. It serves as a luxurious topping for small pancakes, toasted brioche, and open sandwiches. It’s typically accompanied by finely chopped red onion, sour cream, and a sprinkle of chives or dill.

HORSERADISH SAUCE –  made from grated horseradish, sour cream or crème fraîche, this condiment is commonly served with smoked or cured fish, adding a bit of sharpness and creaminess.

Although not native, saffron has become a traditional ingredient in baking, especially around Christmas. Cardamom is another important spice in pastries, used in cardamom buns and traditional Christmas cookies.

Who EATs more per day?

Pick the heavier plate

Iliustration
Back to Top