Travel writing based on first-hand experience
Discover the 20 best Lebanese dishes you need to try—from creamy hummus and crispy falafel to savory kibbeh and sweet baklava. Explore the rich flavors of Lebanon’s culinary delights.
More Lebanon Food & Travel Guides Worth Opening Next
Still hungry after falling into the glorious mezze-shaped rabbit hole? These guides pair nicely with our Best Lebanese Dishes post, whether you want to try the food in Beirut, build a wider Lebanon trip, or keep the culinary plotting going well beyond hummus and kibbeh.
- Taste these classics in real life with the best places to eat in Beirut
- Build a city break around food, culture, and neighborhoods with this Beirut travel guide
- Stretch the trip out with this 7-day Lebanon itinerary
- Prefer a faster route? Try this Lebanon road trip itinerary
- See where else to wander between meals with the best places to visit in Lebanon
- Turn the food obsession into a proper weekend with this 2 days in Beirut itinerary
- Add one more Lebanese food stop with these best restaurants in Jbeil
- Plan smarter around meals, markets, and local customs with these Lebanon travel tips
Table of Contents
1. The Cream of Kecheck

It is a soup prepared with bulghur (cracked wheat) and goat yogurt (or cow yogurt depending on the villages where it was made) that has been dehydrated and reduced to a very fine powder; as well as garlic sautéed in butter…
Kecheck tastes absolutely amazing, strange, almost disturbing, and yet divine. This is not a neophyte’s dish, its texture and taste are not accessible to unseasoned palates.
It is a real peasant soup, ultra-rich, which provides a particular and immeasurably unique pleasure.
Recipe here.
2. Lebanese moussaka

In the same genre as the previous dish, the Lebanese moussaka is a vegetarian dish with eggplant, tomato, and chickpeas.
The Lebanese moussaka and the sheikh el mehchi are two dishes so succulent that the eggplant is incredibly sublimated, to the point of transforming any aubergine-skeptic into a true vegetarian.
This dish is eaten both hot and cold. But hey, “Moussaka” means “Cold” in Arabic, so…
Recipe here.
3. Sheikh el Mehchi

Eggplant stuffed with minced meat cooked Lebanese style. It’s a typical grandma’s meal and, you can believe me, it’s finger-licking good. One of my favorite dishes.
Recipe here.
4. Fassolias

This dish is made from white beans and is found in various forms across the Arab world and the Balkans.
Like many Lebanese dishes, Fassolia fits the theme of being both ultra-rich and ultra-healthy at the same time. However, it’s important to practice moderation when enjoying this delicious stew.
Recipe here.
5. Molokhia– Lebanese spinach

One of the musts of grandmother’s cooking is Molokhia, also known as “Lebanese spinach”.
It’s a vegetable dish (and not spinach per se), which is cooked in such a way as to visually give a stew of greenish leaves, served with chicken and vermicelli rice.
Recipe here.
6. Mujaddara- Lebanese lentil rice

A vegetarian dish made with lentil rice (Mjaddara or Mujaddara) covered with caramelized onions which brings a succulent taste to this dish.
This peasant dish exists both in solid form and in puree. And contrary to its unsavory look, believe me, it’s a pure delight.
Recipe here.
7. Mograbieh

El Moghrabieh, literally “The North African” in Arabic, is precisely a kind of Levantine couscous. Much heavier than the previous dishes, for once, but it has its followers.
Recipe here.
8. Stuffed vine leaves

Stuffed vine leaves are a typical and ancestral dish of the Lebanese diet.
Not only are grape leaves anti-inflammatory, but they are also an excellent source of fiber, vitamins A, C, and K, folate, iron, manganese, and magnesium. Healthy and tastes really good.
Recipe here.
9. Koussa Mahshi

Koussa is a typically ancestral Lebanese dish, made with stuffed zucchini. A pure delight and healthy.
Recipe here.
10. Riz a djej -Rice with Chicken

A festive dish or a Sunday family meal, chicken rice is one of the traditional Lebanese dishes. It is distinguished by the pine nuts that often adorn it.
It is a particularly healthy dish, which allows you to fill up on protein and good carbohydrates, provided you opt for a good basmati rice.
Recipe here.
11. Kebbeh bi Laban

Another ultra-nutritious, elaborate dish typical of the Lebanese countryside: kebbeh.
It’s a variation of the previous dish, except that instead of meat, we choose kebbeh, these dumplings are made from a mixture of bulgur and lamb or raw ground beef topped with cooked ground meat.
Recipe here.
12. Laban Emmo- Shakriye

Laban Emmo, literally “mother’s yogurt”, is a particularly tasty leg of lamb. It is a super rich dish, typical of Lebanese mothers.
Recipe here.
13. Daoud Basha

Minced meatballs (lamb or beef), pine nuts, vermicelli rice, and tomato and onion-based sauce. The dish must be prepared carefully, otherwise it may be a bit heavy.
Recipe here.
14. Samkeh Harra -Spicy fish

Samkeh harra is a typical dish from the Lebanese coast, made with fish (pollock or line-caught hake), cooked with onion fondue, tomatoes, sesame cream, and spiced to your taste with a hint of harissa .
It is an ultra-healthy dish, typical of the Mediterranean diet.
Recipe here.
15. Kafta bil Sanieh

Literally, “Kafta in the dish”, Kafta bil sanieh is a dish made from minced meat with herbs, served with potatoes, tomatoes, and incidentally vermicelli rice.
There, we enter the theme of the ultra-satisfying, rich, and complete, it is the kind of dishes a Lebanese mothers make.
Recipe here.
16. Loubieh Bi zeit

Flat beans in a sauce that can be eaten cold or hot, with or without rice, according to your desires. Like many other Lebanese dishes, it is a vegetarian dish that couldn’t be healthier!
Recipe here.
17. Fatteh

The Lebanese Fatteh is one of the components of the mezze. It is a yogurt-based sauce with tahini (sesame cream), and garlic, and flavored with spices and dried mint, all served with cooked chickpeas.
This is a particularly nutritious dish.
Recipe here.
18. Jellab

Admittedly, the Jelleb is not a dish. But I had to share this ultra-refreshing drink with you. Mix grape molasses with water, ice cubes, and a handful of pine nuts. So Lebanese…
Recipe here.
19. Knafeh

A kind of oriental cheesecake, the Knafeh is a dessert made with cheese, kadaif, and syrup flavored with orange blossom or rose water. Consumed in the Middle East, this dessert is an absolute killer… To be consumed in moderation, of course!
Recipe here.
20. Kibbeh nayeh

A raw meat tartare, decorated with cracked wheat (bulgur), onions, mint, and spices (pepper, cumin, cinnamon). The whole thing is usually pounded again and served with olive oil, fresh mint, and white onions and eaten with pita bread.
Recipe here.
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