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What to eat in Myanmar? Top 4 Burmese Street Food

Last update: Tue Apr 15 2025
Top 4 Burmese Street Food
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01
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Ohn no khao swè, meaning noodles with coconut milk, is a traditional dish that is believed to have inspired the creation of Thailand’s khao sai. It consists of boiled egg noodles and pieces of curried chicken smothered in a creamy coconut-milk-and-chicken soup.


The soup is typically thickened with chickpea flour, and it usually comes with an array of different garnishes and condiments. Typical ingredients added to this dish for enhanced flavor and texture include slices of hard-boiled eggs, crispy fried noodles, bean or chickpea fritters, fresh cilantro, green onions, soaked yellow onions, lime or lemon slices, ngapi fish sauce, and red chili flakes. 
02

Snack

MYANMAR and  3 more regions
4.3
Samusa
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Due to their crunchy texture and a variety of different flavors, samosas provide a perfect introduction to the world of Indian cuisine for newcomers. These deep-fried, triangular pastries are filled with a variety of ingredients ranging from vegetables to meat, such as onions, lentils, spiced potatoes, peas, or ground meat.


It is said that the popular, golden-brown snack travelled to India along the old trade routes from Central Asia, which is why samosas are also prevelent in Middle Eastern countries where they are typically served for Ramadan. In Saudi Arabia, for example, they are typically filled with meat or cheese and can be shaped as triangles, squares, and rolls. 
VARIATIONS OF Samusa
03
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Crowned as the unofficial national dish of Burma, mohinga is a fish and rice noodle soup that can, depending on the region, be enriched with an array of different ingredients by adding them to the soup or using them as a dressing or garnish. When it comes to the origin, various accounts exist, some of them dating as far back to the first century.


By the 19th century, mohinga was regarded as a working-class meal due to its low cost, but over time, it has become so popular that today it can even be purchased as a ready-made soup. Although this fish soup is typically consumed for breakfast, it evolved into an all-day dish that is traditionally sold by street hawkers and roadside sellers.

MOST ICONIC Mohinga

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04

Soup

MYANMAR
n/a
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Samusa is a traditional soup originating from Myanmar. It consists of a flaky samosa pastry that's dunked in a spicy lentil soup and served with shredded cabbage. Although there are many variations on the soup, it's usually prepared with a combination of lentils, black chickpeas, red chili peppers, onions, oil, cabbage, tamarind pulp, vegetable stock, garam masala spices, and coriander.


When served, a samosa is dunked into the soup, which is additionally garnished with coriander, scallions, and lemon or lime wedges. The dish is often prepared and served at street food stalls throughout Myanmar.

TasteAtlas food rankings are based on the ratings of the TasteAtlas audience, with a series of mechanisms that recognize real users and that ignore bot, nationalist or local patriotic ratings, and give additional value to the ratings of users that the system recognizes as knowledgeable. TasteAtlas Rankings should not be seen as the final global conclusion about food. Their purpose is to promote excellent local foods, instill pride in traditional dishes, and arouse curiosity about dishes you haven’t tried.

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Burmese Street Food