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Stunning spread of diverse global cuisines from dozens of diaspora traditions
Food & Dining

Eat the World Without
Leaving the City

We don't say "Asian food." We say Cantonese dim sum. Tamil dosai. Sylheti biryani. Oaxacan tlayudas. Every dish has a homeland. Every kitchen has a story.

Diaspora kitchens are memory machines. Every recipe carries a geography. The jollof rice in Peckham tastes like Lagos. The mangú in Washington Heights is Santo Domingo on a plate. This section maps the edible atlas of diaspora — city by city, community by community, dish by dish.

Every Cuisine Has a Homeland

Not "ethnic food." Named cuisines from named places, cooked by specific communities in specific neighborhoods.

West African jollof rice with plantain and pepper sauce London
West African

Yoruba Kitchen

Jollof rice, pounded yam with egusi, suya, pepper soup, moi moi, and the eternal jollof debate. Peckham is ground zero.

Jollof Rice Suya Egusi Peckham
Traditional Dominican breakfast spread with plantains and tropical juice NYC
Caribbean

Dominican Kitchen

Mangú for breakfast, sancocho for lunch, mofongo for dinner. Morir soñando to drink. Washington Heights feeds the soul.

Mangú Sancocho Mofongo Heights
South Indian dosai with sambhar and coconut chutney on banana leaf Toronto
South Indian

Tamil Kitchen

Paper-thin dosai, steaming idli, fiery Chettinad curry, kothu roti, and filter coffee so strong it wakes up Scarborough.

Dosai Kothu Roti Idli Scarborough
Steaming dim sum baskets in a traditional Cantonese teahouse Singapore
Cantonese

Cantonese Kitchen

Dawn dim sum, roast goose at noon, wonton noodles at dusk. Cantonese food culture runs Singapore's hawker centers and heritage restaurants.

Dim Sum Char Siu Hawker Chinatown
Korean BBQ grill with marinated meats and banchan side dishes Los Angeles
Korean

Korean Kitchen

Koreatown never sleeps. Korean BBQ at 2 AM, 24-hour tofu houses, banchan that could fill a museum. This is the Korean food capital of the West.

Korean BBQ Tteokbokki Kimchi K-Town
Punjabi thali with paratha, chole, and colorful curries London
Punjabi

Punjabi Sikh Kitchen

Southall's Broadway smells like fresh parathas at 7 AM. Chole bhature, jalebi, tandoori, and the Gurdwara langar that feeds thousands for free.

Chole Bhature Langar Tandoori Southall
Mexican street tacos with fresh salsa, lime, and cilantro Los Angeles
Oaxacan / Mexican

Oaxacan Kitchen

Seven moles, tlayudas the size of a tire, chapulines (grasshoppers), mezcal, and tamales wrapped in banana leaf. LA's Oaxacan scene is deep.

Mole Tlayudas Tamales East LA
Jamaican jerk chicken on a grill with tropical seasoning London
Caribbean

Jamaican Kitchen

Jerk chicken smoke fills Brixton. Ackee & saltfish for breakfast. Patties for lunch. Rice & peas with curry goat for dinner. Rum punch to end the night.

Jerk Chicken Patties Ackee Brixton
Hand-pulled noodles being stretched in a NYC Chinatown kitchen NYC
Chinese

Chinese Kitchen (NYC)

Three Chinatowns. Cantonese dim sum downtown, Fujianese fish balls in Sunset Park, Sichuan hot pot in Flushing. The range is staggering.

Dim Sum Hand-Pulled Noodles Dumplings Flushing
Ethiopian injera platter with colorful wots and lentil dishes Los Angeles
East African

Ethiopian Kitchen

Injera is the plate, the utensil, and the soul of the meal. Doro wat, kitfo, tibs — and the coffee ceremony that started it all.

Injera Doro Wat Coffee Ceremony Fairfax
Bengali biryani and spiced dishes served on traditional plates NYC
Bengali / Bangladeshi

Bengali Kitchen

Jackson Heights is a Bangladeshi food universe. Kacchi biryani, hilsa fish curry, fuchka, mishti doi — and chai so sweet it could be dessert.

Biryani Hilsa Fish Fuchka Jackson Heights
North African couscous with tagine and mint tea in a Parisian café Paris
North African & Lebanese

Maghreb & Levant Kitchen

Paris runs on couscous, tagine, and shawarma. From Barbès to Belleville, North African and Lebanese kitchens feed millions daily.

Couscous Shawarma Mint Tea Belleville

What's Cooking Where?

The Edible Atlas

What Are You Craving?

Beautiful plated dish in a diaspora restaurant

Pick a Cuisine. Find a Neighborhood.
Eat Like You Belong.

Every diaspora kitchen is an open door. Walk in, sit down, and taste what home means to a million people.

Choose Your City Browse Day Plans

Common Questions

What is diaspora cuisine?

Diaspora cuisine refers to the food traditions that migrant communities carry with them and adapt in their new homes. It preserves homeland recipes while incorporating local ingredients and influences, creating living culinary traditions that connect generations to their cultural roots.

Where can I find authentic diaspora food?

The most authentic diaspora food is found in the neighborhoods where communities actually live — not tourist districts. Look for places like Peckham in London for Yoruba cuisine, Jackson Heights in NYC for Bengali food, or Southall for Punjabi dishes. DiasporaDays maps these specific locations across 7 global cities.

What are the most popular diaspora dishes?

Popular diaspora dishes span every continent: jollof rice from West African communities, mangú from Dominican neighborhoods, dosai from Tamil kitchens, dim sum from Cantonese communities, jerk chicken from Jamaican enclaves, and mole from Oaxacan traditions. Each dish tells a specific migration story.

How does diaspora food differ from homeland cuisine?

Diaspora food evolves through adaptation — using locally available ingredients, adjusting to new tastes, and sometimes fusing with other culinary traditions nearby. A Jamaican patty in London may differ subtly from one in Kingston, reflecting decades of community evolution while maintaining core flavors and techniques.

What is fusion diaspora cuisine?

Fusion diaspora cuisine emerges when immigrant food traditions blend with local or neighboring culinary cultures. Examples include Korean tacos in LA, Japanese-Peruvian Nikkei cuisine, and British-Punjabi dishes. These fusions happen naturally in multicultural neighborhoods where communities share ingredients, techniques, and kitchen spaces.