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Sri Lankan Food 101: 15 Dishes You Must Try
7 min read ·
Sri Lankan cooking is its own world: coconut milk and fresh coconut in almost everything, fierce chilli heat balanced by sweet and sour notes, and rice in more forms than you knew existed. Eat where locals eat, ideally with your right hand, and work through this list.
The everyday essentials
1. Rice and curry
The national lunch. A mound of rice surrounded by four to eight small curries: one meat or fish, plus vegetables like beetroot, jackfruit, beans and pumpkin, with sambols and crunchy papadam. At a local 'hotel' (which means eatery, not lodging) a huge plate costs very little. Portions are honest and refills of vegetables often free.
2. Pol sambol
Freshly grated coconut pounded with red chilli, lime juice, red onion and often Maldive fish flakes. It goes with everything and you will crave it forever after.
3. Parippu
Red lentil dhal simmered in coconut milk with turmeric, curry leaves and tempered onions. The comfort food constant of every rice and curry spread.
4. Hoppers (appa)
Bowl-shaped pancakes of fermented rice flour and coconut milk, crisp at the edge and soft in the middle. The egg hopper, with an egg cooked into the base, is the classic street breakfast or dinner, eaten with lunu miris, a fiery onion-chilli relish.
5. String hoppers (idiyappam)
Nests of steamed rice-flour noodles, usually served in a stack with dhal, coconut milk gravy (kiri hodi) and pol sambol. A standard breakfast in homes and guesthouses.
6. Kottu roti
Sri Lanka's favourite late-night food. Shredded flatbread chopped on a hot griddle with vegetables, egg, meat and spices by cooks wielding two metal blades; you will hear the clatter down the street. Order cheese kottu once, for science.
Dishes worth hunting down
7. Lamprais
A Dutch Burgher legacy: rice cooked in stock, packed with a mixed-meat curry, blachan, ash plantain and a boiled egg, wrapped in a banana leaf and baked. Best in Colombo bakeries, often only at weekends.
8. Fish ambul thiyal
A dry, sour fish curry from the south, made with tuna and goraka fruit, which preserves the fish and gives it a dark, tangy intensity.
9. Polos
Young green jackfruit curry, slow-cooked until it turns meaty and smoky. One of the best vegetarian dishes on the island.
10. Wambatu moju
Aubergine pickle-relish, deep-fried then dressed sweet and sour. A tiny spoonful transforms a rice plate.
11. Gotu kola sambol
Pennywort leaves shredded with coconut, lime and shallot: fresh, slightly bitter and very good for cutting through richer curries. Any green mallung (shredded greens with coconut) is worth ordering.
12. Pittu
Cylinders of steamed rice flour and grated coconut, crumbly and mild, eaten with coconut milk and a hot curry. Big in the north and east and among Tamil communities.
Sweets and snacks
13. Watalappan
The island's beloved dessert, a Malay-origin steamed custard of coconut milk, jaggery, eggs and cardamom. Look for it at Muslim-run restaurants and festive tables.
14. Curd and treacle
Thick buffalo-milk curd in a clay pot, drenched in kithul palm treacle. Roadside stalls along the southern coast, especially around Tissamaharama, sell the best.
15. Short eats
The collective name for bakery snacks: fish buns (maalu paan), vegetable rotis, cutlets and Chinese rolls. A tray comes to your table at local cafes; you pay for what you take. Perfect bus-journey fuel, alongside the spicy lentil wade sold on trains.
How to eat well here
- Lunch is the big meal; rice and curry is freshest between noon and 2pm and often gone by 3pm.
- Busy equals safe: pick crowded places with high turnover.
- Eating with your hand genuinely improves the experience; mix a little of each curry into the rice. Use only the right hand.
- Say 'less spicy' if you mean it. Local heat is real.
- Wash it down with fresh king coconut (thambili) or sweet milk tea.
Fifteen dishes is only a start; there are regional specialities from Jaffna crab curry to Kandyan sweets waiting once you have covered the basics. Arrive hungry.