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American vs Iranian food & cuisine

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United States of America

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Iran

In United States of America, people consume about 2610 g of food per day, with produce taking the biggest share at 34%, and fish and seafood coming in last at 2%. In Iran, the daily total is around 1778 g, with produce leading at 47% and fish and seafood at the bottom with 2%.

United States of America

Iran

The average American daily plate size is

The average Iranian daily plate size is

2610 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

Americans consume a substantial amount of meat by global standards, with chicken becoming increasingly popular while red meat consumption is stabilizing. Dairy is huge too – record amounts of cheese and butter are consumed these days. The country lags in vegetable and fruit intake. The real American food staples are wheat in bread, pasta, and baked goods, corn in tortillas, cereal, and snack foods.

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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 327 G

WHEAT

233 G

RICE

31 G

CORN

34 G

BARLEY

1 G

RYE

2 G

OATS

16 G

MILLET

0 G

SORGHUM

2 G

OTHER CEREALS

8 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

Wheat and corn are very important to the  American diet. Wheat appears as bread, pasta, and baked goods. Bread is everywhere – from soft white loaves to regional staples like cornbread, sourdough, and rye – forming the base of sandwiches, burgers, and deli subs.

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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 896 G

PULSES

11 G

VEGETABLES

342 G

STARCHY ROOTS

144 G

FRUITS

399 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

In American cuisine, vegetables play second fiddle. They show up as sides, in salads, but are not central. Potatoes dominate, (including fries and chips), also tomatoes, largely via sauces, pizza, ketchup; onions, iceberg lettuce, carrot, broccoli, green beans, peppers. Widely popular are cucumbers in the form of dill pickles or sweet relish, cabbage, usually as cole slaw.

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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 350 G

POULTRY

159 G

PORK

83 G

BEEF

103 G

MUTTON AND GOAT

2 G

OTHER MEAT

2 G

OFFALS

1 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

The United States consistently ranks among the world’s top consumers of beef and poultry, holding the 2nd position globally for poultry consumption and 3rd for beef. Portion sizes in American meat dishes (e.g., 16 oz / 450g steaks, triple-patty burgers) sometimes astonish visitors. While exaggerated, this reflects both abundance and the value through size.

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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 62 G

FISH

36 G

SEAFOOD

26 G

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Fish and seafood 34 G

FISH

32 G

SEAFOOD

2 G

Despite regional richness, fish consumption in the U.S. is relatively low, more secondary after meat and regional. In New England, cod, clam, and lobster are icons with ‘clam chowder’ and ‘fish fry Fridays’ tradition. Salmon is vital in the Pacific Northwest and Alaska; catfish, crawfish, redfish, and shrimp are key in Southern cuisines. Jewish Americans popularized smoked fish – lox and whitefish that became deli staples.

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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 684 G

EGGS

44 G

MILK AND DAIRY

629 G

ANIMAL FATS

11 G

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Eggs and dairy 98 G

EGGS

25 G

MILK AND DAIRY

66 G

ANIMAL FATS

7 G

The U.S. has one of the highest milk intakes, unlike many regions. It has a foundational but shifting role.  The cheese consumption, though, is not declining. In the U.S., cheese is often melted on burgers, pizza, sandwiches, nachos, casseroles, and macaroni. Texture and meltability are prioritized over aging or flavor complexity. Americans are among the top global consumers per capita, especially of mozzarella (due to pizza), cheddar, and processed slices.  Unlike in Europe, it’s rarely eaten as a course on its own; it’s usually integrated into other dishes.

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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 291 G

NUTS

13 G

SWEETENERS

180 G

SUGAR CROPS

0 G

VEG OILS

78 G

OILCROPS

20 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

Peanut butter is the taste of American childhood – pretty much every kid grew up with peanut butter and jelly sandwiches in their lunchboxes; this nostalgia runs into adulthood. It’s one of those uniquely American foods that gets used in everything; no surprise, the U.S. is also the world’s biggest consumer and exporter.

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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

OREGANO

ROSEMARY

SAGE

CHIVES

CILANTRO

DILL

MINT

PARSLEY

THYME

FENUGREEK LEAVES

TARRAGON

United States of America
Common
Iran

BAY LEAVES

OREGANO

ROSEMARY

SAGE

CHIVES

CILANTRO

DILL

MINT

PARSLEY

THYME

FENUGREEK LEAVES

TARRAGON

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Spices

ALLSPICE

CELERY SALT

CLOVES

CUMIN

DRY CHILI

GARLIC POWDER

MUSTARD SEEDS

NUTMEG

ONION POWDER

PAPRIKA

SMOKED PAPRIKA

BLACK PEPPER

CINNAMON

BLACK LIME

FENNEL SEED

FENUGREEK

GOLPAR

GREEN CARDAMOM

ROSE PETALS

SAFFRON

SUMAC

TURMERIC DRY

United States of America
Common
Iran

ALLSPICE

CELERY SALT

CLOVES

CUMIN

DRY CHILI

GARLIC POWDER

MUSTARD SEEDS

NUTMEG

ONION POWDER

PAPRIKA

SMOKED PAPRIKA

BLACK PEPPER

CINNAMON

BLACK LIME

FENNEL SEED

FENUGREEK

GOLPAR

GREEN CARDAMOM

ROSE PETALS

SAFFRON

SUMAC

TURMERIC DRY

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Aromatics

CHILI PEPPERS

LEMON

LIME

SHALLOT

GARLIC

ONION

ROSEWATER

SPRING ONION

United States of America
Common
Iran

CHILI PEPPERS

LEMON

LIME

SHALLOT

GARLIC

ONION

ROSEWATER

SPRING ONION

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Condiments

BROWN SUGAR

BUTTER

GRAIN VINEGAR

LIQUID SMOKE

MAPLE SYRUP

MAYONNAISE

MUSTARD

PORK FAT

VANILLA EXTRACT

WHISKEY

WORCESTERSHIRE SAUCE

BARBERRIES

CLARIFIED BUTTER

DATE SYRUP

DRIED YOGURT

LAMB FAT

PISTACHIOS

POMEGRANATE MOLASSES

VERJUICE

WALNUTS

YOGURT

United States of America
Common
Iran

BROWN SUGAR

BUTTER

GRAIN VINEGAR

LIQUID SMOKE

MAPLE SYRUP

MAYONNAISE

MUSTARD

PORK FAT

VANILLA EXTRACT

WHISKEY

WORCESTERSHIRE SAUCE

BARBERRIES

CLARIFIED BUTTER

DATE SYRUP

DRIED YOGURT

LAMB FAT

PISTACHIOS

POMEGRANATE MOLASSES

VERJUICE

WALNUTS

YOGURT

United States of America

SEASONINGS

American seasoning stands out globally by its bold flavors that often incorporate heat and smokiness. Americans also have a clear love for richness and intensity – they gravitate toward satisfying flavors that deliver immediate impact. This is illustrated by fat-forward dishes (buttery steaks, creamy mac and cheese, loaded burgers), sweet-savory combinations (maple bacon, honey BBQ), and “maximalist” flavor profiles where more is better. Not as central as fat or smoke, vinegar-based BBQ sauces, pickles, and citrus marinades add a contrasting element to the richness.

Americans have this unique relationship with umami-rich processed flavors – they’ve embraced things like aged cheeses, cured meat, fermented sauces, and even MSG-heavy snack foods in ways that create this very distinctive “American taste”.

The other key characteristic is accessibility – American palates favor immediately recognizable and satisfying rather than acquired tastes. It’s a cuisine built on bold satisfaction rather than complexity.

Most American pantry essentials are kosher salt (coarser, milder than table salt), black pepper, garlic, onion, chili powders, paprika, dried oregano, and cinnamon.

Some traditional spice blends include:

OLD BAY – a classic from Baltimore, this blend features celery salt, paprika, black pepper, and other spices, widely used for seafood and snacks.

CHILI POWDER – ground dried chili peppers, cumin, garlic powder, oregano, and paprika. In the U.S., “chili powder” usually means this seasoned blend used in chili con carne. In many other countries, “chili powder” refers simply to pure ground dried chili peppers, without added spices.

EVERYTHING (BUT THE) BAGEL – combines roasted sesame seeds, garlic, onion, poppy seeds, and sea salt, popular as a savory topping on bagels and beyond.

BARBECUE RUBS – various rubs combine spices like smoked paprika, chili powder, cumin, brown sugar, and salt, tailored for ribs, pork, and grilled meats.

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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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