By: Sarah Gleim

6 Traditional Foods Served During Eid al-Fitr

Muslims around the world break their Ramadan fasts with delicious feasts on Eid al-Fitr.

Photo Illustration by Abi Trembly/Getty Images
Published: March 18, 2026Last Updated: March 19, 2026

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What is Eid al-Fitr?:
Eid al-Fitr is the Islamic holiday that marks the end of the holy month of Ramadan.
When is Eid al-Fitr?:
In the United States, Eid al-Fitr will be celebrated on or around Friday, March 20, 2026. Its timing is based on the sighting of the waxing crescent moon.
How is Eid al-Fitr celebrated?:
Muslims gather in the morning for a special communal prayer, then they spend the day feasting with family and friends.

Eid al-Fitr is the holiday that marks the end of the Islamic month of Ramadan, the holiest time of the year for Muslims that honors when the Quran was first revealed to the Prophet Muhammad. Whereas Ramadan is focused on prayer, reflection and fasting—one of the Five Pillars of Islam that all Muslims must follow—Eid al-Fitr is about food.

Accordingly, the holiday’s Arabic name translates to the “festival of breaking the fast.” On Eid morning, Muslims gather for a special communal prayer that commemorates the end of Ramadan. Afterward, families head home, change into festive or new clothes and welcome guests. The rest of the day centers around eating.

“We congregate together, families get together, and we indulge in foods,” says Hasnain Lakhani, founder of the Atlanta Muslim Festival Collective. “Families cook their best dishes because Eid is meant to feel like a feast,” he explains. “[It] is literally a celebration meal.” Muslims also give small gifts and make sure everyone, including neighbors and non-Muslim friends, feels welcome at their tables.

Here’s a look at six dishes and sweet treats that Muslims around the world enjoy while breaking fast on Eid al-Fitr.

1.

Sheer Khurma

This traditional sweet dessert likely originated in Persia and is popular in India, Pakistan and Afghanistan. It’s a rich and creamy pudding with vermicelli, milk, dates and sugar. Some preparations include nuts and other dried fruits. “Sweet dishes are traditional [on Eid] because the Prophet Muhammad encouraged breaking fast with something sweet,” Lakhani says. Some Muslims make sheer khurma the night before Eid and serve it to family and guests as part of the first meal of the day. Dates, with which Muhammad directed Muslims to break their fasts, are the key ingredient in this sweet treat.

Sheer khurma is a sweet vermicelli milk pudding made with dates, a significant food among Muslims. The Prophet Muhammad directed believers to break their fasts with dates.

riaz rehman/Getty Images

Ramadan

Ramadan is the most holy Islamic holiday.

2:54m watch
2.

Maamoul

Maamoul, or ma’amoul, is an ancient shortbread cookie stuffed with date paste, chopped walnuts or pistachios and dusted with powdered sugar. The dough is made with semolina flour (as is traditional), wheat flour or both. It’s then pressed into special molds made of wood or resin and baked until golden.

Palestinian-Jordanian food blogger Sawsan Abu Farha told NPR every home has maamoul during Eid, whether or not they’re homemade. “Some say the cookies are meant to remind you that though fasting is hard, within it is a sweet reward, exactly like maamoul’s outer shell is bland but the core is sweet,” she explained. The Middle Eastern dessert is also popular among Christians on Easter and Jews on Purim.

A Palestinian woman makes maamoul, an ancient cookie filled with dates or nuts, in 2017. Some say the cookies symbolize the difficult yet ultimately rewarding practice of fasting.

Hazem Bader/AFP via Getty Images
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3.

Biryani

Biryani is an aromatic rice dish that originated in Persia and evolved across India, Pakistan and Bangladesh. The shareable meal is made with basmati rice, meat (halal chicken, lamb or goat), spices (often including saffron) and ghee. The complex flavor profile is achieved by marinating the meat in yogurt to tenderize it, parcooking the rice with spices and ghee then slowly steaming it all together. Muslims serve biryani to symbolize abundance and hospitality, and it’s often a centerpiece of the Eid festival setting.

The aromatic rice dish Biryani originated in Persia and evolved in India, Pakistan and Bangladesh

Somnath Mahata/Getty Images
4.

Haleem

Another favorite Eid al-Fitr dish popular throughout the Middle East is haleem. This thick stew is slow-cooked for hours with halal lamb or beef, lentils, barley and spices until it has a porridge-like consistency. It’s usually served with naan and condiments like lemon wedges, fried onions, fresh ginger, mint and chilies. Haleem is hearty and nutritious, and in many Muslim-majority countries, it’s prepared in large quantities and shared with the poor and marginalized during Eid al-Fitr as a symbol of the festival’s spirit of giving.

Haleem, a popular stew in the Middle East, is often shared with poor and marginalized people during Eid al-Fitr.

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5.

Beef Rendang

Rendang is a culturally important curry dish from Indonesia that’s also popular in neighboring Malaysia and Singapore. Its rich flavor comes from slowly simmering halal beef in coconut milk with a mixture of spices and chilies until it’s tender. Beef rendang has become an Eid al-Fitr favorite, because it’s a symbol of abundance and celebration.

Beef rendang is traditionally served in Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore during Eid al-Fitr as a symbol of abundance and celebration.

Rozita Turut/Getty Images
6.

Baklava

Thought to have been invented in the Assyrian Empire during the eighth century B.C. or the Ottoman Empire in the 15th century A.D., Baklava isn’t just beloved by cultures throughout the Middle East. This sticky, flaky, layered pastry is also a mainstay food served during Ramadan; most Muslims eat baklava after iftar, the meal consumed after sunset, because it provides them a quick burst of energy. It’s also a favorite sweet treat during Eid al-Fitr, because baklava is considered a sign of hospitality and generosity in the Islamic faith. Baklava recipes vary, but its main ingredients remain the same: thin phyllo pastry layered with chopped nuts and sweet syrup or honey.

Muslims often break their fasts during Ramadan with baklava. They also enjoy the flaky pastry on Eid al-Fitr.

Ibrahim Yaldiz/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
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About the author

Sarah Gleim

Sarah Gleim is an Atlanta-based writer and editor. She has more than 25 years of experience writing and producing history, science, food, health and lifestyle-related articles for media outlets like AARP, WebMD, The Conversation, Modern Farmer, HowStuffWorks, CNN, Forbes and others. She's also the editor of several cookbooks for Southern Living and Cooking Light. She and her partner Shawn live with a feisty little beagle named Larry who currently dominates their free time.

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Citation Information

Article Title
6 Traditional Foods Served During Eid al-Fitr
Website Name
History
Date Accessed
March 19, 2026
Publisher
A&E Television Networks
Last Updated
March 19, 2026
Original Published Date
March 18, 2026
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