Farmers’ Market
Food Tasting Tour at the Best Outdoor Food Markets in Serbia
1.5 hour – EUR 40
Find out what and where to eat in Belgrade, as locals do
Taste burek, fresh cheese, kajmak, ajvar, čvarci, žito and dessert from the third generation producers
Relax in the atmosphere of market day rituals
Quick book this tour
Use the form on the right to book this tour. We will be in touch shortly after your booking with the confirmation.
Seven Unique Tastes Right From Producers
You’re invited to a cheerful food tasting at locals’ favorite farmers market in Belgrade. We take you to the stalls of the producers whose happy customers we’ve been for years.
You’ll eat what we eat. Come and taste burek, ajvar, fresh cheese, kajmak, čvarci, žito and baklava.
Tasting food at the farmers market, you’ll sense more than flavors: Belgrade locals hand-picking groceries, producers from Serbia cheering for their goodies, local customs and traditions, scents and colors of fresh produce, the mood of the season and talk of the town.
Have Breakfast Like a Local in Belgrade
We start the tasting with burek, a phyllo pastry filled with cheese or meat. Or even one without filling, which is my personal favorite. The place where we’ll have it, straight from the oven, has been in business for 75 years, from grandfather to grandson, who still serves the customers behind the counter, after spending a shift thinning the dough.
Next taste stop is a stall with ajvar, a delicious red pepper spread some call veggie caviar. Mirjana and her daughter prepare it every August as a winter pantry staple, after an old family recipe. They source peppers from Southern Serbia, spend days in the garden roasting them on the grill, peeling the crust and then cooking the peppers on wooden stoves.
What Cheeses to Taste in Belgrade
At the farmers’ market, you’ll want to try something you can hardly find in a restaurant: fresh goat cheese. Our favorite comes from the hills around the town of Vršac, in North-East Serbia. You won’t believe that Anka milked the goats and skimmed the milk just 24 hours earlier!
The other dairy superstar we taste is kajmak from Western Serbia, a high-fat spread that tastes best when you let it melt a bit on warm, crunchy sourdough or corn bread. In summer, you’d want to slice fresh tomatoes on top.
Čvarci [t͡ʃʋǎːrt͜si]
Another fatty guilty pleasure is čvarci, similar to pork rind. Cracking and melting, an explosion of taste and texture even from a minimum dose. Magda, the guy who built this website, once said he would pack them as candy bars and carry them around in his pocket.
Sweets to Taste in Belgrade
Next stall takes us to another third-generation maker-shop owner – Liljana. Ljiljana’s grandfather owned a pastry shop in the 1930s, and then her father brought the masters specializing in Oriental desserts. Today, Liljana serves products of two ancient traditions.
You’ll taste žito or kolyivo, boiled wheat with meaning rooted in the belief in Resurrection. The wheat is served at the family feast of the patron saint – a Serbian custom called slava, listed by UNESCO.
The other tradition is that of Oriental desserts, baklava and its relatives, tulumbe, urmašice and kadaif. Their long history goes all the way back to Mesopotamia. These tasty sweets came to the Balkans with the Ottomans and have stuck ever since.
Where to Eat in Belgrade
After food tasting at the farmers’ market, we take you around the neighbourhood, to show you the places where the locals eat out. You’ll discover the places where Belgrade locals come for a cup of coffee, a good meal, or a takeaway. From traditional Serbian cuisine to the innovative bistros with promising young chefs, you’ll end the tour knowing where to book the table.
Practical Info
Meeting point and end point
In front of Restaurant Kalenić
What else is there
Museum of Nikola Tesla and St Sava Church are at 10 – 15 minute walking distance
Physical activity
easy walking
Payment
Cash at the start of the tour
Start times
Fridays, Saturdays, Sundays
8.30am – 1pm
Let’s Go!
Ready to hit the right places at right times?