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Spanish vs Colombian food & cuisine

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Spain

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Colombia

In Spain, people consume about 2217 g of food per day, with produce taking the biggest share at 35%, and fish and seafood coming in last at 5%. In Colombia, the daily total is around 1903 g, with produce leading at 41% and fish and seafood at the bottom with 1%.

Spain

Colombia

The average Spanish daily plate size is

The average Colombian daily plate size is

2217 g.
1903 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

Spanish people love their food, eat generous portions, and prepare it simply—using only a few fresh ingredients that don’t hide behind excessive seasoning or elaborate presentation. In Spain, culinary wisdom means knowing when to stop rather than what to add. Menus often include the trinity of Spanish proteins: jamón ibérico, salted cod, and fresh seafood. Bread, manchego cheese, quality beef, golden olive oil, ripe tomatoes, and wine are foundational.

Colombia has five ecologically distinct regions, and the food shifts substantially between them. The Pacific coast cooks with coconut milk and river fish. The Llanos runs on grilled beef, closer in character to Venezuelan cuisine than to Bogotá cooking. The Amazon uses ingredients most Colombians in the capital have never encountered. The touristic image of bandeja paisa, arepas, ajiaco is Andean and excludes Pacific and Amazonian traditions.

The unifier across regions is hogao: slow-cooked tomato and scallion, sometimes with garlic and cumin. Corn and potato anchor the carbohydrate base in highland regions; coastal areas substitute plantain and yuca. Historically, beans have supplied more protein than meat. The flavor profile is mild; heat is applied optionally through table sauces. The main meal is lunch: soup, a main plate, fresh fruit juice. The juice finish is standard.

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Grains 316 G

WHEAT

271 G

RICE

31 G

CORN

6 G

BARLEY

2 G

RYE

4 G

OATS

2 G

MILLET

0 G

SORGHUM

0 G

OTHER CEREALS

0 G

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Grains 363 G

WHEAT

93 G

RICE

150 G

CORN

112 G

BARLEY

3 G

RYE

0 G

OATS

5 G

MILLET

0 G

SORGHUM

0 G

OTHER CEREALS

0 G

Wheat has been a cornerstone grain for centuries. Wheat breads prevail, though in many forms and recipes, depending on the region. Some of the most popular are pan de barra – baguette-style bread with a crispy crust and soft interior, used for making bocadillos; pan de payes – thick rustic crust, and dense, chewy crumb, used for toasting and served with tomato and olive oil; pan de molde – sandwich bread, soft and sliced; molletes – small round rolls; rosquilletas – thin, crispy breadsticks.

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Corn is he base grain. Arepa,  griddled, precooked cornmeal cake appears at every meal. Unlike Mexican masa, Colombian arepa dough skips nixtamalization, producing a different texture entirely. Corn also produces tamales, mazamorra, and chicha.

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Produce 774 G

PULSES

15 G

VEGETABLES

304 G

STARCHY ROOTS

164 G

FRUITS

291 G

SEA PLANTS

0 G

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Produce 781 G

PULSES

18 G

VEGETABLES

143 G

STARCHY ROOTS

234 G

FRUITS

380 G

SEA PLANTS

0 G

The humble potato is loved in Spain: tortilla española – potato omelet, patatas bravas tossed in spicy sauce, or the wrinkled  Canarian papas arrugadas with mojo sauce. Spain ranks as one of Europe’s top potato producers and consumers, with each region developing distinctive potato specialties.

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Produce in Colombian cooking is not a salad story. It builds broth, thickens stews, and softens starch-heavy plates. The typical plate structure a protein, a starch, a cooked legume, something fried or boiled, and a vegetable element that sharpens or moistens the rest.

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Meats 290 G

POULTRY

89 G

PORK

147 G

BEEF

35 G

MUTTON AND GOAT

5 G

OTHER MEAT

4 G

OFFALS

10 G

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Meats 174 G

POULTRY

96 G

PORK

31 G

BEEF

39 G

MUTTON AND GOAT

0 G

OTHER MEAT

0 G

OFFALS

8 G

No meat is as popular in Spain as is pork. It has to do with the overall pork popularity in Europe and the dry-curing – the Spanish form of art. World finest jamón ibérico with its counterpart jamón serrano are eaten both daily and are served as special treat for celebrations. Dedicated ham shops jamonerías and the sight of hanging hams in bars are a part of Spanish culture.

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Beef built the country’s meat culture, but chicken now accounts for more of what Colombians actually eat. Pork sits in a third category — lower in daily consumption than either, but disproportionately present at celebrations.

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Fish and seafood 111 G

FISH

79 G

SEAFOOD

32 G

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Fish and seafood 24 G

FISH

23 G

SEAFOOD

1 G

Fish and seafood in Spain are consumed in huge quantities, especially in coastal Galicia, Andalusia, and Catalonia. You’ll find everything from octopus, clams, and shrimp to bacalao salt cod, sea bream, sea bass, and sardines. Spain’s affinity for cephalopods is unique – cuisine features octopus, squid, and cuttlefish prepared in dozens of ways, unlike many other European cuisines.

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On the coasts and in river communities, fish is the primary daily protein. In Bogotá and the highland interior, it’s secondary — something eaten on Fridays, in restaurants, or for a special cazuela. There is no tradition of fermented fish, fish sauce, or dried seafood as flavor infrastructure. Fish in Colombia is a main ingredient or nothing.

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Eggs and dairy 504 G

EGGS

41 G

MILK AND DAIRY

452 G

ANIMAL FATS

11 G

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Eggs and dairy 347 G

EGGS

40 G

MILK AND DAIRY

303 G

ANIMAL FATS

4 G

Dairy farming and shepherding have historically been more prevalent in Galicia, Asturias, and the Basque Country. Spain has a long tradition of cheesemaking, so it is challenging to pinpoint the exact number of varieties. It is estimated that around 150-200 cheese types are Spanish, and 26 are classified as Protected Designations of Origin.

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Dairy arrived with Spanish cattle in the 16th century and never developed beyond fresh cheese. There is no (extensive) aged cheese tradition, no (extensive) yogurt culture, and no fermented dairy infrastructure beyond two regional exceptions.

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SUGARS, FATS AND NUTS 222 G

NUTS

35 G

SWEETENERS

86 G

SUGAR CROPS

0 G

VEG OILS

84 G

OILCROPS

17 G

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SUGARS, FATS AND NUTS 214 G

NUTS

1 G

SWEETENERS

156 G

SUGAR CROPS

2 G

VEG OILS

44 G

OILCROPS

11 G

Olive oil is so essential in Spain that its consumption is nearly three times the Mediterranean average. Spain is the world’s largest producer of olive oil, responsible for about 44% of global production. It is also the second-largest consumer worldwide, with an annual consumption of 10 liters per person, trailing only Greece.

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Colombian desserts sit in the middle range — neither particularly restrained nor built around elaborate pastry. The sweetness comes from panela, unrefined sugarcane block: darker and more complex than refined sugar, with a faint molasses character. Compared to Peru, where convent sweets and meringue have a more publicly visible presence, Colombian sweets are domestic, regional, and tied to Christmas tables and street stalls.

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Herbs

BAY LEAVES

LEMON VERBENA

MARJORAM

ROSEMARY

THYME

OREGANO

PARSLEY

CILANTRO

CULANTRO

GALLANT SOLDIER

Spain
Common
Colombia

BAY LEAVES

LEMON VERBENA

MARJORAM

ROSEMARY

THYME

OREGANO

PARSLEY

CILANTRO

CULANTRO

GALLANT SOLDIER

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Spices

CLOVES

DRY CHILI

NUTMEG

PAPRIKA

SAFFRON

SMOKED PAPRIKA

BLACK PEPPER

CINNAMON

CUMIN

ANNATTO/ACHIOTE

CACAO

Spain
Common
Colombia

CLOVES

DRY CHILI

NUTMEG

PAPRIKA

SAFFRON

SMOKED PAPRIKA

BLACK PEPPER

CINNAMON

CUMIN

ANNATTO/ACHIOTE

CACAO

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Aromatics

BELL PEPPERS

FENNEL

LEMON

ORANGE

TRUFFLES

GARLIC

ONION

TOMATO

CHILI PEPPERS

LIME

SPRING ONION

Spain
Common
Colombia

BELL PEPPERS

FENNEL

LEMON

ORANGE

TRUFFLES

GARLIC

ONION

TOMATO

CHILI PEPPERS

LIME

SPRING ONION

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Condiments

ANCHOVIES

CAPERS

OLIVE OIL

OLIVES

TOMATO PASTE

WINE

WINE VINEGAR

PORK FAT

ACHIOTE PASTE

COCONUT MILK

PANELA

VINEGAR

Spain
Common
Colombia

ANCHOVIES

CAPERS

OLIVE OIL

OLIVES

TOMATO PASTE

WINE

WINE VINEGAR

PORK FAT

ACHIOTE PASTE

COCONUT MILK

PANELA

VINEGAR

Spain

SEASONINGS

Spanish dishes are straightforward in flavor, allowing the quality of the ingredients to shine through. Herbs and spices enhance but don’t overpower the primary ingredients.

Paprika PIMENTÓN is a cornerstone of culinary identity. While it is also used in Hungarian or Portuguese cuisines, Spanish paprika stands out for its deep, smoky flavor. Comes in two varieties: pimentón de la vera and pimentón de murcia.

DE LA VERA is a district in Western Spain famous for drying and smoking red peppers over an oak fire and then grinding them. This method imparts a smoky, woodsy flavor to food without requiring the food to be smoked. The peppers are also earthy, with just a hint of fruitiness and brightness.

PMENTON DE MURCIA is usually sun-dried and provides a sweet, rich, and fruity flavor. Both varieties come in three types: sweet–dulce, bittersweet–agridulce, and hot–picante.

In addition to paprika, Spanish cuisine uses bay leaves, saffron, garlic, parsley, and ñora, a unique Spanish red round pepper that is sweet and mild (500 Scoville heat units). It is typically dried in the sun and ground alone, or it can be ground with garlic or soaked in hot water and rehydrated.

SAUCES

SOFRITO – a classic Spanish flavor base made from onions, garlic, tomatoes, bell peppers, and olive oil. It is used as a base for stews, soups, and rice dishes like paella and can be varied with ingredients such as orange, saffron, and garlic.

ROMESCO is a sauce made from roasted tomatoes, garlic, almonds, hazelnuts, olive oil, red wine vinegar, and ñora peppers. It is used as a dip for vegetables, seafood, and meats and as a condiment for grilled foods.

ALLIOLI – a cold emulsified garlic, olive oil, egg yolks (optional in some regions), lemon juice, and salt sauce found on the Mediterranean coast of Spain and France.

SALSA BRAVA – tomato sauce, paprika, chili powder, vinegar, and olive oil; this is the iconic sauce for patatas bravas.

MOJO – The Canary Islands sauce comes in green or red varieties, the latter being spicy. These sauces are commonly served with salty boiled potatoes and papas arugadas, as well as a dip for bread. Both green and red mojos are made from garlic, lime juice, olive oil, cumin, white wine vinegar, and salt; the green mojo also contains green bell pepper, cilantro, and/or parsley, while the red mojo uses red bell pepper, red wine vinegar, and chili pepper or jalapeño.

Colombia

SEASONINGS

Colombian seasoning is quieter than its neighbors’. Where Mexican cooking layers chiles and Peruvian leans aromatic, Colombian flavor is built on slow extraction: aromatics cooked down until they turn sweet, fats absorbing spice and carrying it through the dish. Traditional Colombian recipes are not spicy; heat is almost always added afterward by the diner using ají. Its not that Colombia does not have chili tradition –  it does, and it’s still alive in indigenous communities and on the coasts.

Garlic, long-stem scallions, tomato, culantro, and cumin are core flavorings. They go in early and cook long. Culantro is not a finishing herb like cilantro, but a herb with a more intense aroma, tougher body, and more pungent to survive heat in stews. It goes into ajiaco broths and sancocho, where cooking time would reduce ordinary cilantro to nothing. Cumin also enters with the aromatics, blooms in fat, and sets the baseline earthiness in savory cooking. Oregano, black pepper, bay leaf support. Regular soft cilantro and galant solder guascas finish dishes. Guascas is lesser known outside of South and Central America.  It’s an Andean herb, earthy and faintly nutty, somewhere between artichoke and lime, usually added late.  Guascas is what makes ajiaco. Leave it out, and you have just a simple broth.

Achiote, or annatto seeds, native to tropical South America, is also steeped in oil at the beginning. That colored oil is what gives rice, soups, and stews their orange tint. It stood in for saffron when Spanish sofrito was adapted locally: achiote was cheap and grew everywhere, saffron was neither. The flavor it adds is faint.

SAUCES

HOGAO is the base sauce. Tomatoes and long green onions are cooked down slowly in oil with cumin until the mixture thickens and becomes jammy. It works at both ends of a dish — stirred into beans, rice, and braises at the start, spooned over arepas and patacones at the table. It looks like Spanish sofrito but parts ways on technique: cooked longer, reduced further.

AJÍ is the table sauce — chopped tomato, scallion, cilantro, and ají pepper, assembled raw and set beside the plate.

SUERO COSTEÑO, a fermented cream from the Caribbean coast, gets drizzled over arepas and fried food as a finishing sauce.

SALSA ROSADA — mayonnaise and ketchup combined, is on every street food: empanadas, patacones, hot dogs, arepas, fried chicken. This one often gets omitted, but it’s arguably the most ubiquitous condiment on an actual Colombian table (source).

Who EATs more per day?

Pick the heavier plate

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