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Lithuanian vs Iranian food & cuisine

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Lithuania

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Iran

In Lithuania, people consume about 2267 g of food per day, with eggs and dairy taking the biggest share at 29%, and fish and seafood coming in last at 4%. In Iran, the daily total is around 1778 g, with produce leading at 47% and fish and seafood at the bottom with 2%.

Lithuania

Iran

The average Lithuanian daily plate size is

The average Iranian daily plate size is

2267 g.
1778 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

Lithuanian cuisine is rooted in the land, seasons, and simplicity. It values honest flavors over spice or technique, focusing on potatoes, rye, dairy, pork, mushrooms, beets, and cabbage. The short growing season made it necessary to favor root vegetables, mushrooms, and berries; use them boiled, pickled, or fermented. Rye bread and fresh dairy are staples from antient times.

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Iranian cuisine was one of the earliest and most influential culinary forces in history. Iranian cooking runs rice, which anchors lunch and dinner, bread handles breakfast and snacks. Lamb is the default meat, almost always paired with kidney beans, lentils, or split peas cooked down into a stew. Fresh herbs show up in quantities that would surprise most Western cooks — not sprinkled on top, but eaten by the handful. Yogurt sits alongside nearly everything.

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Grains 384 G

WHEAT

302 G

RICE

11 G

CORN

5 G

BARLEY

42 G

RYE

20 G

OATS

0 G

MILLET

0 G

SORGHUM

0 G

OTHER CEREALS

4 G

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Grains 529 G

WHEAT

416 G

RICE

104 G

CORN

8 G

BARLEY

1 G

RYE

0 G

OATS

0 G

MILLET

0 G

SORGHUM

0 G

OTHER CEREALS

0 G

Before potatoes, grains dominated Lithuanian cooking. Rye thrived in this cold climate, so no wonder dense, slightly sour rye bread (ruginė duona), made with natural sourdough, remains essential. Lithuanians pair it with soups, herring, or cold charcuterie.

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In Iran, rice is treated as a craft. The signature technique, tahdig, is a deliberately formed crispy crust at the pot’s bottom. Most cuisines try to prevent this; here it’s the goal. The cooking method itself, parboiling then draining then steaming separately, produces fully separate grains — the opposite of risotto, pilaf, or East Asian sticky rice.

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Produce 585 G

PULSES

5 G

VEGETABLES

279 G

STARCHY ROOTS

149 G

FRUITS

152 G

SEA PLANTS

0 G

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Produce 837 G

PULSES

11 G

VEGETABLES

345 G

STARCHY ROOTS

91 G

FRUITS

340 G

SEA PLANTS

0 G

Potatoes define Lithuanian cuisine. No other ingredient shows up as often or matters as much. Cepelinai (meat-stuffed potato dumplings), kugelis (baked pudding), vėdarai (potato sausage), and bulviniai blynai (potato pancakes) show how one ingredient can be turned soft, crisp, or creamy with simple methods.

 

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Fruit in savory cooking is one of the most striking aspects of Persian cuisine for outsiders. Sour cherries, prunes, dried apricots, barberries, and quince are cooked down until they lose their shape but control the flavor. Street stalls pile up dried, preserved, candied, and leathered fruits, most of them sour.

 

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Meats 244 G

POULTRY

80 G

PORK

137 G

BEEF

15 G

MUTTON AND GOAT

1 G

OTHER MEAT

2 G

OFFALS

9 G

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Meats 100 G

POULTRY

68 G

PORK

0 G

BEEF

18 G

MUTTON AND GOAT

10 G

OTHER MEAT

0 G

OFFALS

4 G

Lithuanians love their meat. Pork dominates Lithuanian tables more than anything else. It’s symbolic, affordable, and versatile, making Lithuania one of the world’s top pork consumers per capita. You’ll find it in sausages (dešros), meatballs (kotletai), schnitzel-style cutlets (karbonadai), ribs (šonkauliukai), and crisp bacon bits (spirgai) that top potato dishes. Historically, families would slaughter a pig before winter, making sausages, blood pudding, and smoked hams – a preservation habit that still defines Lithuanian markets today.

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Lamb is the reference meat. Historically, other meats were judged against it and found lacking. Beef was traditionally peasant food and became common only by mid-20th century — it remains the affordable, less prestigious option.

 

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Fish and seafood 83 G

FISH

75 G

SEAFOOD

8 G

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Fish and seafood 34 G

FISH

32 G

SEAFOOD

2 G

Once fish was common only in fishing communities and mainly eaten during religious fasts like Lent and Christmas Eve (Kūčios). That tradition continues – no Kūčios table is complete without herring, pike, or carp.

Freshwater pike, perch, bream, carp, and eel are most typical; Baltic coast also adds sprats, herring, and cod. Herring, in particular, is very traditional in Lithuanian cuisine — salted, pickled, or layered into beet-and-egg salads. It appears on both festive and everyday tables, usually with hot potatoes. Lithuania’s fondness for herring reflects Jewish, Nordic, and German influences, with the first two shaping it most.

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The north and south are effectively two separate fish cuisines. The Caspian yields cold-water whitefish, kutum, and sturgeon, cooked mildly — baked or lightly fried with herbs. The Persian Gulf coastline runs on warm-water seafood, shrimp, bold spicing, and tamarind. Tamarind is nearly invisible in the rest of Persian cooking, but in southern dishes like ghalieh mahi it’s the defining ingredient.

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Eggs and dairy 656 G

EGGS

34 G

MILK AND DAIRY

603 G

ANIMAL FATS

19 G

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Eggs and dairy 98 G

EGGS

25 G

MILK AND DAIRY

66 G

ANIMAL FATS

7 G

Dairy is a rich, tangy, and creamy cornerstone of Lithuanian cuisine, just as vital as meat or potatoes. The northern climate favors dairy farming, and when meat was once costly, milk became key for nutrition, shaping a lasting tradition. For centuries, small farms produced fresh dairy and curd cheeses for local use, with aged or fermented varieties appearing commercially only in the late 19th century.

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Iran’s arid climate produced a pastoral dairy tradition built around preservation. Fresh milk spoils; so it becomes mast (yogurt), which either becomes doogh (diluted, drunk) or kashk (concentrated, dried, shelf-stable for months). Significant portion of dairy, particularly kashk and homemade yogurt, passes through informal channels — home production, local markets — and may not appear cleanly in national consumption data.

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SUGARS, FATS AND NUTS 315 G

NUTS

14 G

SWEETENERS

261 G

SUGAR CROPS

0 G

VEG OILS

28 G

OILCROPS

12 G

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SUGARS, FATS AND NUTS 180 G

NUTS

28 G

SWEETENERS

95 G

SUGAR CROPS

14 G

VEG OILS

38 G

OILCROPS

5 G

Many Lithuanian desserts are built on apples, poppy seeds, curd cheese, berries, and honey. Most are flour-based: pies, bakes, biscuits, or doughnuts.

Simple sweets include tinginys (lazy cake), a no-bake mix of biscuits and cocoa. At the other end of the technique spectrum is šakotis (tree cake), a layered cake baked on a rotating spit for weddings and celebrations.

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Cooking fat is not neutral here. Butter, clarified butter, and rendered lamb fat carry flavor intentionally. Sesame oil appears in some regional cooking.

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Herbs

BAY LEAVES

MARJORAM

SORREL

CHIVES

DILL

PARSLEY

CILANTRO

FENUGREEK LEAVES

MINT

TARRAGON

THYME

Lithuania
Common
Iran

BAY LEAVES

MARJORAM

SORREL

CHIVES

DILL

PARSLEY

CILANTRO

FENUGREEK LEAVES

MINT

TARRAGON

THYME

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Spices

ALLSPICE

CARAWAY

DILL SEED

BLACK PEPPER

BLACK LIME

CINNAMON

FENNEL SEED

FENUGREEK

GOLPAR

GREEN CARDAMOM

ROSE PETALS

SAFFRON

SUMAC

TURMERIC DRY

Lithuania
Common
Iran

ALLSPICE

CARAWAY

DILL SEED

BLACK PEPPER

BLACK LIME

CINNAMON

FENNEL SEED

FENUGREEK

GOLPAR

GREEN CARDAMOM

ROSE PETALS

SAFFRON

SUMAC

TURMERIC DRY

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Aromatics

CARROT

CELERY ROOT

DRIED MUSHROOMS

PARSLEY ROOT

GARLIC

ONION

ROSEWATER

SPRING ONION

Lithuania
Common
Iran

CARROT

CELERY ROOT

DRIED MUSHROOMS

PARSLEY ROOT

GARLIC

ONION

ROSEWATER

SPRING ONION

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Condiments

BERRY PRESERVES

BUTTER

FRUIT VINEGAR

HONEY

HORSERADISH

MAYONNAISE

POPPY SEEDS

PORK FAT

SOUR CREAM

BARBERRIES

CLARIFIED BUTTER

DATE SYRUP

DRIED YOGURT

LAMB FAT

PISTACHIOS

POMEGRANATE MOLASSES

VERJUICE

WALNUTS

YOGURT

Lithuania
Common
Iran

BERRY PRESERVES

BUTTER

FRUIT VINEGAR

HONEY

HORSERADISH

MAYONNAISE

POPPY SEEDS

PORK FAT

SOUR CREAM

BARBERRIES

CLARIFIED BUTTER

DATE SYRUP

DRIED YOGURT

LAMB FAT

PISTACHIOS

POMEGRANATE MOLASSES

VERJUICE

WALNUTS

YOGURT

Lithuania

SEASONINGS

In Lithuanian cooking, you’ll find a modest palette of spices and herbs, but very purposefully tied to local produce and preservation. Dishes tend to build flavour by layering base ingredients (potatoes, dairy, rye bread, pork) with finishing touches (smoked bacon, sour cream, herbs). Dairy dominates (cream, sour cream), which means textures are smooth and flavours lean toward satisfying rather than startling. Because of the strong tradition of same rye bread, mushrooms, forest berries, earthy, malty, tangy, smoky hints are also present. In a world context, you could say Lithuanian seasoning sits between rustic Northern European (Scandinavia, other Baltic countries) and Central European (Germany, Poland) habits.

Some of the standout seasonings include:

  • Dill –  often used fresh to garnish potatoes, fish, soups and pickles
  • Caraway seeds are common, especially in rye bread, cabbage dishes and stews
  •  Garlic and onion — important for flavouring meat dishes, pickles, smoked goods
  •  Bay leaves  and peppercorns — used in brines, stews, smoked meats
  • Sour cream is inseparable from Lithuanian traditional sauces

SAUCES

Lithuanian cuisine doesn’t rely on sauces in the same way as French or Mediterranean cuisines, but it does feature a few traditional ones:

MUSHROOM SAUCE – made from wild forest mushrooms, cream or sour cream, butter, and onions. It’s served with potatoes, meat, or dumplings.

BACON SAUCE – small fried bacon bits (spirgučiai) mixed with onions and sour cream and poured over potatoes, dumplings, or pancakes.

HORSERADISH SAUCE – Freshly grated or pickled horseradish mixed with sour cream, vinegar, or mayonnaise. Served with cold meats, smoked fish, or beetroot dishes.

GARLIC MAYO – A cold sauce made with mayonnaise and crushed garlic. It’s a popular dip for fried bread or meats.

CRANBERRY SAUCE – mildly tart, slightly sweet condiment, served with meats and poultry to gently refresh the richness.

Iran

SEASONINGS

Persian cooking targets your nose before the palate. Flavor runs along sourness, sweetness, and fragrance. Chili heat is largely absent, although it surely exists in Southern Iran and the Persian Gulf coast. Garlic is present but rarely dominant. Herbs used in quantities close to vegetables.

Sourness is probably the most pronounced flavor. The arsenal is wide, starting with dried lime limu omani. It releases sour, fermented, slightly bitter notes slowly over heat. The closest parallel is preserved lemon in North African cooking, but preserved lemons are used for their rind and salt-cured flavor, added near the end. Another sour element is unripe grape juice (verjuice/ab-ghooreh), pomegranate molasses, sumac, tamarind in the south, and small, intense, tart barberries zereshk. Barberries were used medicinally across many cultures, but that mostly faded. Iran kept them central. Each produces a distinct kind of sour. Limu omani is fermented and slightly bitter, sumac is dry and astringent, and verjuice is sharp and clean. They’re not interchangeable!

The aromas are built on saffron, rosewater, cardamom, dried rose petals, and cinnamon. Iran produces roughly 90% of the world’s saffron, the most expensive spice by weight. It is always bloomed in hot water before use, and it gives the dish a warm and luminous yellow color and a floral, honeyed smell with a metallic edge.

Golpar, a Persian hogweed, is genuinely Iranian. The seeds get dried and ground into a powder with a slightly bitter, faintly citrusy smell. Street vendors in Iran sell fresh pomegranate seeds in little cups with golpar sprinkled over them. Beyond that, it goes into ash, pickling brines (torshi), and fava bean dishes. It’s obscure enough outside Iran that most Western spice shops don’t carry it, and there’s no great substitute.

Persian cuisine is actually unusual in that it doesn’t lean on fixed spice blends. The closest thing is advieh, but calling it a spice mix slightly misrepresents it because there’s no canonical version. The rice version (advieh polo) tends toward the floral — dried rose petals, cardamom, cinnamon, sometimes dried ginger. The stew version shifts more savory. Every family has their own proportions, and regional versions diverge significantly. What actually unifies Persian cooking at the spice level is a handful of individual ingredients used almost universally: turmeric, saffron, dried limes and cinnamon.

Who EATs more per day?

Pick the heavier plate

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