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What to eat in Romania? Top 5 Romanian Breakfasts

Last update: Thu Mar 20 2025
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01
Bulz
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Bulz is a traditional dish created with cooked polenta that is shaped into balls and filled with a creamy stuffing. Subsequently, polenta balls are grilled, pan-fried, or baked until a crunchy, slightly charred crust forms on the outside. The most common filling is the combination of butter and soft sheep's cheese known as brânză de burduf.


Chunks of bacon or ham are often incorporated into the filling to create a more balanced meal. The grilling process allows the cheese to melt and transforms bulz into an incredibly satisfying dish. It is believed that bulz was initially prepared by the Romanian shepherds, who were the first to use an open fire in order to grill these flavorful balls. 
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02
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Plăcintă aromână, also known as plăcintă macedoneană in Romania, is a traditional pie that is usually filled with leeks or spinach, eggs, cheese, and sour cream. On a pastry sheet that has been brushed with lard, the egg-cheese filling with blanched spinach or leeks is evenly spread, topped with another dough layer, and then baked in the oven.


Once baked, the pie is usually served warm for breakfast, with a glass of yogurt on the side.

03
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Plăcintă cu cartofi is a traditional pastry dish consisting of a flat, round dough patty that is stuffed with mashed potatoes, and then fried in oil or lard until golden brown on both sides. Grated cheese, salted butter, sautéed chopped onions, and spices can be added to the stuffing for extra flavor.


These fried patties are typically topped with cream cheese and usually served for breakfast, ideally with a cup of tea on the side.

04
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Gogoși is a donut prepared the Romanian way, made with a dough mixture that is flavored with vanilla extract and grated lemon or orange peel, then deep-fried in hot oil. Traditional gogoși is prepared without yeast or butter, and the dough mixture is added to hot oil in spoonfuls, yielding donuts with different, irregular shapes, unlike the regular round-shaped donuts.


A typical homemade treat, gogoși can also be found in bakeries and supermarkets across Romania, sometimes labeled as gogoși infuriate, meaning infuriated gogoși. It is served warm with a generous dusting of icing sugar on top and can be filled with fruit jams or chocolate. 
05
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Mămăligă cu lapte is a traditional dish consisting of cornmeal porridge served with milk. The cornmeal porridge is made by cooking cornmeal in salted water until the concoction reaches a thick and smooth consistency. It is then allowed to chill a bit and harden before it's cut into slices using a piece of kitchen string.


The cornmeal slices are then placed in a bowl and covered with hot milk before serving. The dish can also be prepared with cornmeal porridge leftovers combined with milk, and there is also a sweet version that uses sugar instead of salt and combines the porridge with milk and fruits. 

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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Romanian Breakfasts