
15 Tunisian Dishes You Must Try: A Food Lover's Guide
Tunisian food: A culinary treasure
Tunisian cuisine is one of the great undiscovered food cultures of the Mediterranean. Bold flavors, fresh ingredients, and influences from Berber, Arab, French, Turkish, and Italian cooking create dishes you'll crave long after you leave.
The 15 must-try dishes
1. Couscous
The national dish. Steamed semolina grains served with a rich stew of lamb or chicken, vegetables, and chickpeas. Friday lunch is couscous day for every Tunisian family.
2. Brik
Tunisia's most famous street food. A thin, crispy pastry triangle filled with egg, tuna, capers, and parsley, deep-fried until golden. You must eat it with your hands — the egg should be runny!
3. Lablabi
A humble breakfast soup of chickpeas in a spicy broth, topped with torn bread, olive oil, cumin, harissa, and a raw egg that cooks in the hot broth. Cheap, filling, and delicious.
4. Mechouia Salad
Grilled peppers, tomatoes, and onions, peeled and chopped with olive oil, tuna, capers, and hard-boiled egg. Smoky, fresh, and typically served as a starter.
5. Harissa
Tunisia's iconic chili paste. Made from dried chile peppers, garlic, caraway seeds, and olive oil. It's on every table in every restaurant.
6. Fricassé
Fried bread rolls stuffed with tuna, harissa, olives, potatoes, and egg. The ultimate Tunisian street food sandwich — $0.50 each.
7. Ojja
Eggs poached in a spicy tomato and pepper sauce with merguez sausage. Tunisia's answer to shakshuka.
8. Grilled fish
Fresh Mediterranean catches grilled whole with lemon and olive oil. Best in coastal towns — Sidi Bou Said, Tabarka, Mahdia.
9. Tajine (Tunisian style)
Not a stew like Moroccan tajine — Tunisian tajine is a baked egg dish, like a thick frittata with meat, cheese, and vegetables.
10. Bambalouni
Fried doughnuts rolled in sugar. Hot, crispy, and sold from street carts in every city. One of Tunisia's simplest pleasures.
11. Makroudh
Diamond-shaped semolina pastries stuffed with dates and fried, then soaked in honey. Kairouan makes the best ones in Tunisia.
12. Shorba Frik
A smoky green wheat soup, traditionally served during Ramadan. Rich, warming, and deeply flavored.
13. Merguez
Spicy lamb sausages, grilled to perfection. Often served in bread with harissa and mechouia salad.
14. Mint Tea with Pine Nuts
Not just a drink — it's a ritual. Sweet green tea with fresh mint, served with floating pine nuts on top.
15. Assida Zgougou
A traditional dessert made from Aleppo pine nuts, served during Mawlid celebrations. Creamy, nutty, and uniquely Tunisian.