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Moroccan Food — What to Eat and What It Costs

Tagine, couscous, mint tea, and what a real meal actually costs.

Moroccan food centers on tagine (a slow-cooked stew named for the cone-shaped clay pot it's cooked in) and couscous, traditionally served on Fridays. A tagine at a casual restaurant runs $5-9, street food $1-4. Morocco is Muslim-majority, so halal food is the default nearly everywhere. Mint tea, poured from a height in a ceremonial style, is offered constantly — accepting a glass is polite and doesn't obligate a purchase.

Moroccan food runs on slow cooking, deep spice, and genuine hospitality rituals — this guide covers what to actually order, roughly what it costs, and the dietary and cultural context worth knowing before you land.

Questions people actually ask

What is the national dish of Morocco?
There isn't a single official one, but tagine and couscous are the two dishes most associated with Moroccan cuisine — tagine year-round, couscous traditionally on Fridays.
Is Moroccan food halal?
Yes, by default — Morocco is Muslim-majority, so halal is the standard nearly everywhere without needing to ask specifically.
Can I get alcohol in Morocco?
Yes, at tourist-oriented restaurants, hotels, and bars in bigger cities, though it isn't part of everyday dining culture and many local medina restaurants don't serve it at all.