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Polish vs Lebanese food & cuisine

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Poland

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Lebanon

In Poland, people consume about 2188 g of food per day, with produce taking the biggest share at 36%, and fish and seafood coming in last at 1%. In Lebanon, the daily total is around 1873 g, with produce leading at 43% and fish and seafood at the bottom with 1%.

Poland

Lebanon

The average Polish daily plate size is

The average Lebanese daily plate size is

2188 g.
1873 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

Polish cuisine isn’t quick, and it may not always win the aesthetic awards. It’s heavy, hearty, and may demand hours of time. But that’s exactly the point. This is real soul food — the kind that comes from necessity, tradition, and the belief that good things take work. It evolved over the centuries to be eclectic, rich in meat, potatoes, buckwheat, mushrooms, butter, cream, eggs, and pickles of all sorts.

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The backbone of Lebanese cooking is a fresh, predominantly plant-based approach, featuring diverse mezze, extensive use of vegetables, grains, pulses, flatbreads, aromatic spices, and traditional sweets. Core ingredients are bulgur, chickpeas, lentils, flatbreads, char-grilled chicken, lamb and mutton, fresh salads, mezze with a bright, herbal quality. Lebanese use olive oil, garlic, sumac, and lemon generously and create a harmony between lightness and flavor.

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Grains 395 G

WHEAT

283 G

RICE

14 G

CORN

0 G

BARLEY

16 G

RYE

71 G

OATS

6 G

MILLET

0 G

SORGHUM

0 G

OTHER CEREALS

5 G

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Grains 387 G

WHEAT

333 G

RICE

44 G

CORN

5 G

BARLEY

4 G

RYE

0 G

OATS

1 G

MILLET

0 G

SORGHUM

0 G

OTHER CEREALS

0 G

Kasza (groats), covers a lot: buckwheat, barley, millet, pearl barley, oats. All minimally processed, all locally important. Poland has varieties of groats much the same way Italy is known for its pastas. Buckwheat kasza gryczana is almost a national starch. Roasted buckwheat porridge is served as a side dish instead of potatoes, mixed into soups, pierogis.

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Fresh wheat flatbreads are central to every meal in Lebanon. Levantine cuisines rely on bulgur, semolina, and and antient grain freekeh – roasted green wheat with a smoky flavor. Bulgur, in fine to coarse sizes, appears in tabbouleh, kibbeh, and pilafs. Semolina, from durum wheat, is used like bulgur and forms the base of Lebanese couscous.

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Produce 792 G

PULSES

3 G

VEGETABLES

344 G

STARCHY ROOTS

272 G

FRUITS

173 G

SEA PLANTS

0 G

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Produce 804 G

PULSES

21 G

VEGETABLES

357 G

STARCHY ROOTS

155 G

FRUITS

227 G

SEA PLANTS

0 G

Cabbage and potatoes matter a lot in Polish cuisine. In a cool climate, cabbage is foundational, especially fermented. Beets are consumed creatively too. Carrots, parsley root, celeriac, leeks, and parsnip form a recognizable aromatic base called włoszczyzna (the Italian stuff), used in broths across the country. That tight, repeated combination is distinctly Polish compared to Mediterranean sofrito or French mirepoix.

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Vegetables and vegetarian dishes are essential. Tomatoes – fresh in salads (tabbouleh, fattoush), cooked in stews, sauces, and stuffed dishes. Cucumbers – eaten raw, in salads, and with yogurt. Onions – base for stews, mujadara, and marinades; also served raw with grilled meats. Eggplants – grilled, stuffed, or pureed into baba ghanoush and moussaka. Zucchini – especially in stuffed dishes.  Bell peppers – used in salads, grills, and stuffings. Leafy greens & herbs – parsley, mint, and purslane are essential in salads and flavoring.

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Meats 243 G

POULTRY

86 G

PORK

150 G

BEEF

4 G

MUTTON AND GOAT

0 G

OTHER MEAT

0 G

OFFALS

3 G

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Meats 99 G

POULTRY

57 G

PORK

2 G

BEEF

33 G

MUTTON AND GOAT

4 G

OTHER MEAT

0 G

OFFALS

3 G

In Poland, meat means pork. An average Pole consumes around 150 grams per day, among the highest globally. For centuries, Poles raised pigs alongside chickens and geese because they require little land and reproduce quickly. Polish cooks use pork every way possible: fresh, braised, rendered into lard, turned into sausages. Dozens of regional kiełbasa styles, eaten hot or cold, smoked or cured, appear at every meal. Poland’s everyday reliance on smoked pork as a flavor base is consistent and distinct.

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Meat used to be pricey and was saved mostly for weekends and holidays. The traditional staples were lamb, goat, and beef. Pork was also eaten, but less so due to Islamic dietary rules and long-standing culinary traditions. There’s a distinction between traditional meats and modern consumption patterns in Lebanon.

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Fish and seafood 32 G

FISH

31 G

SEAFOOD

1 G

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Fish and seafood 24 G

FISH

20 G

SEAFOOD

4 G

Despite Baltic Sea access, Poland never developed fresh fish markets or daily seafood habits common in Mediterranean or Atlantic cuisines. Repeated loss of Baltic access through war pushed the cuisine toward freshwater fish. Carp dominates Christmas Eve dinner (Wigilia), fried in breadcrumbs, baked in aspic, or served in sweet-sour sauce. Pike, zander, trout, and tench appear regularly, baked, poached, or fried.

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These days, chicken is by far the most common on the table. In many recipes that originally used lamb or mutton, beef has now taken its place. It features kibbeh, grilled skewers (kebabs), shawarma, kofte, and slow-cooked stews. Meat has a symbolic role in feasts, hospitality, and religious celebrations, often marking abundance.

Historically, Lebanon’s topography focused on land agriculture – growing pulses, veggies, fruits, livestock, and dairy. Fish and seafood are indeed a part of Lebanese cuisine, but in a smaller ratio compared to other Mediterranean countries, except in coastal areas.

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Eggs and dairy 549 G

EGGS

25 G

MILK AND DAIRY

488 G

ANIMAL FATS

36 G

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Eggs and dairy 277 G

EGGS

14 G

MILK AND DAIRY

257 G

ANIMAL FATS

6 G

Śmietana, cultured sour cream, goes into soups and sauces and finishes nearly every Polish dish. Twaróg fresh curd cheese appears at breakfast and in sweet fillings. Kefir and buttermilk are everyday drinks.

Poland is one of Europe’s largest milk producers, yet the cuisine favors simple, minimally aged cheeses. Oscypek, the smoked sheep’s cheese from the Tatra region, is a protected exception. Most dairy is humble and functional.

Eggs are used, but not a central ingredient in Lebanese cuisine. They appear in some everyday dishes, in pastries, and as a binding in kibbeh, still not as dominant as in European cuisines.

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SUGARS, FATS AND NUTS 177 G

NUTS

16 G

SWEETENERS

124 G

SUGAR CROPS

0 G

VEG OILS

30 G

OILCROPS

7 G

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SUGARS, FATS AND NUTS 282 G

NUTS

36 G

SWEETENERS

175 G

SUGAR CROPS

0 G

VEG OILS

50 G

OILCROPS

21 G

Polish desserts lean on poppy seeds and twaróg. Makowiec is a dense spiral cake of honey-sweetened ground poppy rolled into yeast dough. Sernik, the Polish cheesecake, uses twaróg instead of cream cheese, giving it a drier, more granular texture. Pączki are jam-filled fried doughnuts.

Almonds, walnuts, and especially pine nuts are essential flavor builders and garnishes. You’ll find them toasted, scattered over rice-and-meat dishes, stirred into stews, folded into kibbeh, or layered into sweets like baklava and mafroukeh. Compared with much of the world, this heavy reliance on nuts is distinctive.

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Herbs

CHIVES

DILL

SORREL

WILD GARLIC

BAY LEAVES

MARJORAM

PARSLEY

CILANTRO

MINT

OREGANO

THYME

Poland
Common
Lebanon

CHIVES

DILL

SORREL

WILD GARLIC

BAY LEAVES

MARJORAM

PARSLEY

CILANTRO

MINT

OREGANO

THYME

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Spices

CARAWAY

DILL SEED

JUNIPER BERRIES

WHITE PEPPER

ALLSPICE

BLACK PEPPER

ANISEED

CINNAMON

CORIANDER

CUMIN

DRY CHILI

GREEN CARDAMOM

MAHLAB

NIGELA SEED

SUMAC

TURMERIC DRY

Poland
Common
Lebanon

CARAWAY

DILL SEED

JUNIPER BERRIES

WHITE PEPPER

ALLSPICE

BLACK PEPPER

ANISEED

CINNAMON

CORIANDER

CUMIN

DRY CHILI

GREEN CARDAMOM

MAHLAB

NIGELA SEED

SUMAC

TURMERIC DRY

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Aromatics

CARROT

CELERY ROOT

DRIED MUSHROOMS

PARSLEY ROOT

GARLIC

ONION

CHILI PEPPERS

LEMON

MASTIC

ORANGE WATER

ROSEWATER

TOMATO

Poland
Common
Lebanon

CARROT

CELERY ROOT

DRIED MUSHROOMS

PARSLEY ROOT

GARLIC

ONION

CHILI PEPPERS

LEMON

MASTIC

ORANGE WATER

ROSEWATER

TOMATO

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Condiments

BERRY PRESERVES

BUTTER

FRUIT VINEGAR

HORSERADISH

MAYONNAISE

MUSTARD

POPPY SEEDS

PORK FAT

SOUR CREAM

HONEY

CLARIFIED BUTTER

DATE SYRUP / SILAN

DATES

DRIED YOGURT

OLIVE OIL

PINE NUTS

PISTACHIOS

POMEGRANATE MOLASSES

SESAME SEEDS

TAHINI

TOMATO PASTE

YOGURT

Poland
Common
Lebanon

BERRY PRESERVES

BUTTER

FRUIT VINEGAR

HORSERADISH

MAYONNAISE

MUSTARD

POPPY SEEDS

PORK FAT

SOUR CREAM

HONEY

CLARIFIED BUTTER

DATE SYRUP / SILAN

DATES

DRIED YOGURT

OLIVE OIL

PINE NUTS

PISTACHIOS

POMEGRANATE MOLASSES

SESAME SEEDS

TAHINI

TOMATO PASTE

YOGURT

Poland

SEASONINGS

Polish cooking doesn’t aim for complexity. It gets intensity through repetition and layering of a few core elements: fermentation, smoke, fat, few herbs and spices.  Each component is strong on its own, and together they create something that hits multiple taste receptors at once.

Polish cooking uses lard and bacon fat as a foundational flavor carrier. Bacon is rendered until the fat runs clear, and that pork fat becomes the medium that holds everything together.

Acid is the second pillar, and Poles use it more aggressively than most Western European cuisines. Sour cream is a staple condiment for many dishes.  Fermented sauerkraut, cucumbers, and other vegetables balance fat.

The spice palette is restrained. Dried marjoram dominates in kielbasa and pork dishes. Caraway is a bread and sauerkraut staple seasoning, adding a distinctive anise note. Dill gets used fresh and dried, thrown in by the handful.

Smoked meats like kielbasa and kabanos aren’t just preserved; they’re smoked, and that flavors the entire pot. Even cheese gets smoked, like oscypek.

Polish food doesn’t chase the crispy-tender contrast you see in Asian stir-fries or the al dente precision of Italian pasta. Things are cooked until soft, often braised for hours until the meat falls apart. Potatoes get boiled and sometimes pan-fried in butter, but crispness isn’t the goal. It creates comfort through softness.

SAUCES

Most of these sauces rely on fundamental sour cream.  They’re designed to complement hearty meats and starches, not overpower them.

SOS PIECZENIOWY – roast gravy, made from meat drippings, stock, sometimes thickened with flour. Served with kotlet schabowy, roast pork, meatballs, and mashed potatoes.

SOS GRZYBOWY – mushroom sauce, uses dried forest mushrooms, typically porcini. Poles rehydrate these mushrooms and simmer them with cream or stock to create an earthy sauce that accompanies dumplings, meats, and potato pancakes.

SOS KOPERKOWY – dill sauce, made with fresh dill, sour cream, and often a roux base, is poured over boiled potatoes or fish and vegetables. The sauce is creamy with that distinctive dill tang.

SOS CHRZANOWY – is pure horseradish sauce, sometimes mixed with cream or beets. It’s sharper than ćwikła and traditionally served with boiled beef or pork dishes.

SOS CEBULOWY – onion sauce, sometimes cream-based, sometimes gravy-based.

SOS MUSZTARDOWY – mustard sauce, often paired with pork or boiled meats.

ĆWIKŁA – pink sauce / condiment, which combines grated beets with horseradish, creating a sweet-sharp condiment for cold meats.

Lebanon

SEASONINGS

A Lebanese flavor profile is fragrant, fresh, and balanced – never overwhelming, always layered. Herbs are less prominent than various spices and their combinations, with the exception of mint and parsley. Lebanese cuisine welcomes not only fresh but also dried herbs, especially mint, which is generously used in beverages.

Compared to other Mediterranean cuisines, Lebanese dishes stand out for its sourness . The sour elements are yogurt, tomatoes, pomegranates, and their molasses, extensive use of lemon juice, verjuice (acidic juice made by pressing unrip grapes), plums, almonds, apricots (even not fully ripened), high-quality sumac. The name of sumac comes from the Aramaic word summaq, meaning dark red. Indeed, dark red berries, once they are fully ripe are harvested, dried, and ground to a texture of ground nuts. Widely used in Turkish, Middle Eastern, and Lebanese cooking, it adds sourness and zestiness and calls out the natural flavors in meats, salads, and dips. Many Lebanese sauces and dressings feature garlic, lemon, and tahini, a paste made from toasted and ground sesame seeds. Sesame, nigella seeds, mahlab are often sprinkled on breads and pastries.  The use of floral waters is extensive: orange blossom water and rose water have been used for centuries and are associated with luxury and refinement.

ZA’ATAR – a fundamental spice mix often used as a topping for bread, meats, and vegetables, or mixed with olive oil. Made of dried thyme, sumac, sesame seeds, salt.

Warm spices are popular: allspice, cinnamon, nutmeg, coriander, cumin, cloves, and black pepper. Together, they form the BAHARAT spice blend, which is also known as the Lebanese SEVEN SPICE blend.

Though more widely associated with Egypt, variations of DUKKAH are also found in Lebanese cuisine. It blends sesame seeds, coriander seeds, cumin, salt, and black pepper.

KAMOUNEH  spice – used to flavor kibbeh and can be used as a meat rub. This spice mix gives a distinctive earthy flavor: cumin (key spice, hence the name), coriander, cinnamon, pepper, dried mint, allspice, sumac, and basil.

SAUCES

The classy flavor combination of garlic, lemon, and olive oil is also common to Lebanon. It unfolds in TOUM sauce (resembling Spanish allioli and French aioli), where these three ingredients, salt and water, are emulsified to a thick spread in a food processor. Although the ingredients are the same, the feel and texture of the sauce are quite distinct.

TARATOR sauce – tahini, lemon juice, garlic, water used as a dressing for falafel, shawarma, fish, or served alongside kibbeh and roasted vegetables

DIBIS W TAHINI – a traditional sauce made from a mix of tahini and dibis (date molasses).

SUMAC SAUCE – a tangy sauce made from sumac, olive oil, and sometimes mixed with onions and parsley.

Who EATs more per day?

Pick the heavier plate

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