Egyptian Food — What to Eat and What It Costs
Koshari, ful medames, and what a real Egyptian meal actually costs.
Egyptian food is hearty, cheap, and built around legumes, bread, and bold spicing — a full meal from a local spot runs $2–6, a sit-down restaurant $6–15, and a nice dinner out $15–30 per person. Don't miss koshari (the national dish — rice, lentils, macaroni, crispy onions, spiced tomato sauce), ful medames (stewed fava beans, usually breakfast), taameya (Egyptian-style falafel, made from fava beans not chickpeas), and molokhia (a garlicky green stew). Almost everything is naturally halal, and vegetarians eat very well.
Egyptian food doesn't get the international spotlight that, say, Thai or Lebanese cooking does, and that's honestly a shame — it's cheap, filling, and built on centuries of getting the most flavor out of lentils, beans, and bread. Here's what to actually order, roughly what it costs, and how to eat like a local.













































