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Cypriot vs Portuguese food & cuisine

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Cyprus

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Portugal

In Cyprus, people consume about 1948 g of food per day, with produce taking the biggest share at 27%, and fish and seafood coming in last at 4%. In Portugal, the daily total is around 2419 g, with produce leading at 39% and fish and seafood at the bottom with 7%.

Cyprus

Portugal

The average Cypriot daily plate size is

The average Portuguese daily plate size is

1948 g.
2419 g.
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Grains

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Fish and seafood

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Produce

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Eggs and dairy

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Meats

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Sugar, fats and nuts

Cyprus shares many flavors with its neighbors, but its cuisine has a character of its own. Meals often revolve around meze, small dishes served all at once, fresh local ingredients, plenty of mint and olive oil, and a fondness for slow-cooked food. Bread, sausages, and halloumi cheese show up everywhere, from breakfast to dinner.

Even with such external influences, the Portuguese remained mostly faithful to their local foodways. The essence of Portuguese cuisine lies in its simplicity and respect for hearty, rustic dishes born from land and sea: an extraordinary variety of seafood, dedication to slowly-simmered flavors, and rich, hearty stews – all unpretentious food that prioritizes quality ingredients over complexity.

When in Portugal, expect a big portion, where at the center is bread and wine followed by soup and the main course of stews, grilled meats, or seafood, served with rice and potatoes on one plate.

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Grains 418 G

WHEAT

340 G

RICE

21 G

CORN

28 G

BARLEY

20 G

RYE

0 G

OATS

1 G

MILLET

0 G

SORGHUM

0 G

OTHER CEREALS

8 G

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Grains 383 G

WHEAT

265 G

RICE

47 G

CORN

48 G

BARLEY

8 G

RYE

8 G

OATS

6 G

MILLET

0 G

SORGHUM

0 G

OTHER CEREALS

1 G

Wheat dominates, as it does across the Mediterranean, but Cyprus uses a wider mix of grains, including barley, corn, and rice. Wheat remains essential for pita, a thick, oval, oven-baked bread eaten daily.

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Unlike their Mediterranean neighbors, the Portuguese consume fewer wheat-based cereals, instead favoring corn and rice. This dietary distinction is further shaped by Portugal’s strong emphasis on fish, seafood, and meat, which naturally reduces the cereal grains in daily eating. Despite this overall pattern, bread remains a critical staple—Portuguese so appreciate their bread that it accompanies every meal of the day.

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Produce 531 G

PULSES

7 G

VEGETABLES

253 G

STARCHY ROOTS

57 G

FRUITS

214 G

SEA PLANTS

0 G

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Produce 931 G

PULSES

10 G

VEGETABLES

345 G

STARCHY ROOTS

175 G

FRUITS

323 G

SEA PLANTS

0 G

Cypriot cooking leans heavily on vegetables, but meat, dairy, and grains often balance or even outweigh them. Vegetables show up in salads, stews, and alongside grilled foods, usually dressed with lemon and olive oil. A typical summer salad mixes celery leaves and stalks, parsley, coriander, tomatoes, and cucumber. Purslane and wild dandelion greens are also popular.

 

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Portugal has a never-ending affair with potatoes, as potatoes are featured in almost every dish. It is likely to find both rice and potatoes as side dishes on the same plate. Portuguese justify it that a high carb combination provides you with the energy to explore countries.

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Meats 218 G

POULTRY

78 G

PORK

104 G

BEEF

19 G

MUTTON AND GOAT

12 G

OTHER MEAT

1 G

OFFALS

4 G

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Meats 270 G

POULTRY

85 G

PORK

108 G

BEEF

57 G

MUTTON AND GOAT

6 G

OTHER MEAT

2 G

OFFALS

12 G

Livestock farming has long shaped Cypriot agriculture and diet. Many villages lie inland, sometimes far from the coast, and this distance from the sea historically tied people to animal husbandry. Pork became the dominant meat, prepared through charcoal grilling, sausages, and preservation with smoke and wine. Red wine, in fact, defines much of the island’s charcuterie.

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Portuguese meat consumption is relatively high within the Mediterranean. When combining meat and fish consumption, Portugal ranks among the world’s top five consumers. The average Portuguese person consumes approximately 430 grams of animal protein daily – translating to an impressive 157 kilograms per person annually.

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Fish and seafood 69 G

FISH

43 G

SEAFOOD

26 G

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Fish and seafood 164 G

FISH

120 G

SEAFOOD

44 G

As for the island on the Mediterranean Sea, the traditional cuisine must include seafood – and it does. Locals grill octopus, squid, sea bream, and red mullet, then finish them with lemon and sea salt. Grilling is common, though locals also prepare seafood soups and stews. Cypriot meze is often ocean-focused, offering fish roe salad, squid, and small fried fish.

Portugal is a seafaring nation with a well-developed fishing industry, and it reflects well on Portuguese tables.
The average Portuguese consumes 60 kilos of fish and seafood yearly—3.5 times more than the typical world citizen!

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Eggs and dairy 480 G

EGGS

22 G

MILK AND DAIRY

446 G

ANIMAL FATS

12 G

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Eggs and dairy 492 G

EGGS

29 G

MILK AND DAIRY

435 G

ANIMAL FATS

28 G

Milk and dairy play an important role in Cypriot cooking. It’s striking that such a small island produced a cheese as widely known as halloumi. This semi-hard, unripened, brined cheese, from goat’s and sheep’s milk, has been part of local life for centuries.  Anari is another key cheese. Soft and similar to ricotta, it works in both savory and sweet dishes and is often served with honey. Yogurt is a staple, used in cooking and served alongside rich meats.

Like in many Western cultures, milk and dairy are commonly used plain, fermented to yogurt, or as an ingredient in dishes: sauces, pastries, desserts, custards, and puddings use milk or cream as a primary ingredient. Portugal has rich cheese-making traditions, made from cows, goat, or sheep’s milk. Usually, these are very strongly flavored and fragrant.

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SUGARS, FATS AND NUTS 232 G

NUTS

10 G

SWEETENERS

163 G

SUGAR CROPS

0 G

VEG OILS

43 G

OILCROPS

16 G

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SUGARS, FATS AND NUTS 179 G

NUTS

22 G

SWEETENERS

84 G

SUGAR CROPS

0 G

VEG OILS

54 G

OILCROPS

19 G

Olive oil is a primary source of fat for salads, grilled veggies, meats, and bread dippings. Some seed oils are also used, like sunflower oil, but to a lesser extent.

Many Cypriot desserts rely on semolina or flour, sugar or honey, almonds, walnuts, sometimes fruit, rose-water, or mastic. These give sweets a warm, aromatic,  nutty or floral flavour — not overly rich, but comforting. You’ll find desserts that are crunchy outside and soft inside, flaky and nutty, dense and chewy, or silky and light.

Overall, Mediterranean countries are famous for loving and producing nuts, and though Portugal is slightly below the regional average, they still consume around 8 kilos of nuts per person per year.

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Herbs

MINT

PURSLANE

BAY LEAVES

OREGANO

PARSLEY

ROSEMARY

THYME

CILANTRO

LEMON VERBENA

MARJORAM

Cyprus
Common
Portugal

MINT

PURSLANE

BAY LEAVES

OREGANO

PARSLEY

ROSEMARY

THYME

CILANTRO

LEMON VERBENA

MARJORAM

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Spices

ALLSPICE

MAHLAB

BLACK PEPPER

CINNAMON

CLOVES

CORIANDER

CUMIN

DRY CHILI

NUTMEG

PAPRIKA

SAFFRON

SMOKED PAPRIKA

Cyprus
Common
Portugal

ALLSPICE

MAHLAB

BLACK PEPPER

CINNAMON

CLOVES

CORIANDER

CUMIN

DRY CHILI

NUTMEG

PAPRIKA

SAFFRON

SMOKED PAPRIKA

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Aromatics

FENNEL

MASTIC

ROSEWATER

GARLIC

LEMON

ONION

ORANGE

TOMATO

BELL PEPPERS

CARROT

CHILI PEPPERS

Cyprus
Common
Portugal

FENNEL

MASTIC

ROSEWATER

GARLIC

LEMON

ONION

ORANGE

TOMATO

BELL PEPPERS

CARROT

CHILI PEPPERS

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Condiments

CAROB SYRUP

HONEY

SESAME SEEDS

TAHINI

YOGURT

CAPERS

OLIVE OIL

OLIVES

WINE

WINE VINEGAR

PORK FAT

Cyprus
Common
Portugal

CAROB SYRUP

HONEY

SESAME SEEDS

TAHINI

YOGURT

CAPERS

OLIVE OIL

OLIVES

WINE

WINE VINEGAR

PORK FAT

Cyprus

SEASONINGS

Cypriots ground up their flavors with fresh ingredients. They start with ripe tomatoes, cucumbers, lemons, greens, olives, and herbs that grow like weeds in the countryside. When they season seafood, it’s often just lemon, sea salt, and olive oil. Simple. Confident.

Herbs define the cooking style. Fresh mint gets heavy use in Cypriot cooking. It’s mixed into meatballs keftedes, salads, cheese pies. Often used alongside cinnamon. Oregano, parsley, and thyme add aroma to grilled meats.

Spices are used sparingly, except for coriander, which gives a warm citrus note in pork dishes, sausages, and breads. Aromatic onions and garlic form the base of many dishes, and bay leaves are often added to stews and rice. Salt, acid, and fat balance play a big role. Halloumi brings salt and chew. Olives bring punch. Lemon brightens almost everything. Olive oil ties dishes together. Many traditional meat dishes rely on red wine to build flavor.

Mahlab, with its sweet, almond-like flavor, features pastries; sesame seeds and tahini dips are also loved. Honey, preserved fruits sweeten desserts, and rose water provides fragrance.

There’s also a love of contrast. Hot grilled meats with cool yogurt or tzatziki. Crunchy salads next to tender braises. Salty cheeses with sweet watermelon in the summer. That mix keeps the food lively and refreshing.

SAUCES

TAHINI / TASHI sauce –  tahini, lemon juice, garlic, cumin, olive oil and water. This sauce is served with grilled meats.

TALATOURI is Cyprus’s version of tzatziki. The key difference is that it uses fresh or dried mint and lemon juice instead of dill. The base is yogurt mixed with grated cucumber, garlic, and olive oil.

TARAMASALATA rounds out the trio. It’s made from cod roe, milk-soaked bread, potatoes, and olive oil, blended into a puree.

Portugal

SEASONINGS

Portuguese seasoning traditions share many herbs with their Mediterranean neighbors. Portugal stands out in Southern Europe for its extensive use of cilantro, using it in countless traditional dishes. Parsley also dominates the herbal profile, cinnamon, vanilla, and nutmeg enhance pastries, while pepper, bay leaves, cumin, and paprika add distinctiveness to savory dishes. Onions, garlic, and tomatoes form the aromatic base, complemented by olive oil, butter, and grape-based wine vinegar.

SAUCES

While Portuguese cuisine is not known for being spice-hot, it has a unique fiery signature sauce unmatched in southern Mediterranean cooking: PIRI-PIRI (or PERI-PERI). The key ingredient, the spicy chillied travelled a long way to settle in southern Portuguese cuisine. The original chilli comes from the Americas, but it was not immediately adopted by the Portuguese. They carried chilli plants to their African colonies, mainly Mozambique and Angola, where the plants thrived and the African bird’s-eye variety developed. Portuguese settlers and local African cooks began mixing these chillies with garlic, lemon, oil and salt. The sauce later made its way back to Portugal and became part of Portuguese cuisine. The sauce is paired with flame-grilled chicken (frango piri-piri), seafood, rice, and vegetable dishes.

MOLHO VERDE – A green sauce with olive oil, garlic, parsley, and vinegar or lemon juice, commonly served with grilled fish.

VINHA D’ALHOS – A marinade-like sauce of wine vinegar, garlic, bay leaves, and paprika used for pork and other meats.

ALHADA – A garlic-olive oil emulsion sometimes enhanced with cilantro, used particularly with shellfish dishes like amêijoas à Bulhão Pato.

MOLHO DE VILÃO – a traditional sauce from the Azores, made of garlic, onions, olive oil, paprika, vinegar, and sometimes white wine. A tangy sauce paired with grilled meats, particularly pork, gives a rich, smoky flavor.

REFOGADO – Not strictly a sauce but a flavor base of sautéed onions, garlic, bay leaf, olive oil, and sometimes tomatoes that starts many Portuguese dishes.

Who EATs more per day?

Pick the heavier plate

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