Snack
12 viral, validated snack recipes — each tested by a named editor in a real kitchen.
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Pão de queijo — pane al formaggio brasiliano
Bouncy, chewy, gluten-free cheese rolls with a crackly shell and a stretchy, cheesy centre. Made from tapioca starch — no wheat, no kneading, ready in half an hour.
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Tteokbokki — gnocchi di riso piccanti coreani
Korea's favorite street snack: chewy cylindrical rice cakes simmered in a sweet-and-spicy gochujang sauce with fish cakes and scallion, until the sauce turns thick and glossy. Comforting, fiery, addictive.
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Currywurst — salsiccia al curry di Berlino
Berlin's iconic street snack: a fried pork sausage sliced and drowned in a tangy-sweet curried tomato sauce, dusted with more curry powder. Invented in postwar Berlin, eaten standing up with a little wooden fork and fries.
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Samosa — fagottini indiani speziati di patate
The crisp, golden triangle loved across India and beyond: a flaky pastry shell wrapped around a spiced filling of potato, peas, cumin and ginger, deep-fried until shatteringly crunchy. Eaten by the millions as a teatime snack with tamarind and mint chutneys — the ultimate fried parcel.
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Coxinha — crocchette di pollo brasiliane
Brazil's №1 street snack: a teardrop-shaped croquette of soft dough wrapped around shredded, seasoned chicken (often with creamy catupiry), breaded and deep-fried until golden and crunchy. Shaped to look like a little chicken drumstick — 'coxinha' means 'little thigh' — they're the must-have at every Brazilian party, bakery and boteco.
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Onigiri — polpette di riso giapponesi
Japan's perfect handheld snack: warm short-grain rice shaped into a triangle around a savoury filling, wrapped in a strip of crisp nori. From umeboshi to salmon to tuna-mayo, onigiri is the lunchbox, picnic and convenience-store staple of Japan — humble, portable and endlessly comforting. The whole trick is the right rice, lightly salted hands, and a gentle, firm shaping.
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Takoyaki — polpettine di polpo giapponesi
Osaka's most famous street snack: a savoury batter cooked in a special dimpled pan, each ball hiding a nugget of octopus, then turned with picks into crisp-outside, molten-inside spheres. Brushed with takoyaki sauce and Japanese mayo, showered with aonori and dancing bonito flakes, takoyaki is hot, gooey, theatrical fun — best eaten straight off the griddle (and blown on first).
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Acarajé — frittelle di fagioli dall'occhio di Bahia
The soul of Bahian street food, with roots across the Atlantic in West Africa: fritters of ground black-eyed peas and onion, deep-fried in dendê (red palm oil) until crisp and golden, then split open and stuffed with vatapá, caruru, dried shrimp and a fiery pepper sauce. Sold by the baianas in their white lace on the streets of Salvador, acarajé is sacred to Candomblé and beloved as a snack — crunchy, spicy, and deeply Afro-Brazilian.
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Lángos — focaccia fritta ungherese
Hungary's irresistible fried street food: a disc of soft yeasted (often potato) dough stretched thin and deep-fried until golden, puffy and crisp, then rubbed with raw garlic and piled high with sour cream and grated cheese. Lángos is the smell of Hungarian markets, festivals and beaches — hot, chewy, garlicky and indulgent, eaten with your hands. From the classic sour-cream-and-cheese to a hundred loaded toppings, it's pure comfort.
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Choripán — panino argentino al chorizo con chimichurri
The undisputed king of Argentine street food and the opening act of every asado: a juicy grilled chorizo, butterflied for maximum char, tucked into crusty bread and slathered with vibrant, garlicky, herby chimichurri. Choripán (chori + pan) is simple, smoky and gloriously messy — the thing everyone eats while the rest of the barbecue is still cooking. The chimichurri is non-negotiable, and the bread should be sturdy enough to soak up all the juices.
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Cong you bing — focaccine cinesi al cipollotto
China's savoury, flaky street snack: an unleavened dough rolled with oil and a blizzard of scallions, then coiled, flattened and pan-fried until shatteringly crisp and golden outside with chewy, layered, oniony insides. The trick to those famous flaky layers is the roll-coil-and-flatten technique that laminates oil through the dough. Cong you bing is quick, cheap and deeply moreish — torn into wedges and dipped in a soy-vinegar sauce, hot from the pan.
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Arancini
Sicily's golden street-food jewels: balls of saffron risotto-style rice wrapped around a molten filling — classically a ragù of meat and peas with mozzarella, or ham and cheese — then crumbed and deep-fried until crisp and deep gold. Their name means 'little oranges', for their colour and shape. Crack the crunchy shell and the rice gives way to a savoury, cheesy, sometimes oozing centre. Found in every Sicilian bar and bakery, arancini are the perfect way to transform rice into something irresistible — crisp outside, creamy and rich within.