Bandeja paisa traditional Medellín dish
Bandeja paisa — the multi-component centerpiece of Antioquian cuisine

Paisa cuisine is the regional cooking of Antioquia, and it’s built around heavy, hearty dishes designed for farmworkers and miners. Most plates feature beans, corn, pork or beef, and a starch — typically arepa, plantain, or potato. It’s comfort food at scale: portions are generous, prices are reasonable, and almost every traditional restaurant in Medellín serves the same handful of canonical dishes.

Bandeja Paisa

The bandeja paisa is the regional flag dish: a single platter holding red beans, white rice, ground beef, chicharrón (fried pork belly), chorizo (paisa-style sausage), fried plantain, half an avocado, fried egg, arepa, and sometimes morcilla (blood sausage). It’s designed for one person but easily feeds two. Best at Mondongo’s, Hatoviejo, or El Rancherito.

Bandeja paisa platter close-up

Mondongo

Mondongo is a beef tripe stew, slow-simmered with potato, carrot, peas, and corn, served with rice, plantain, and avocado. The flagship version is at Mondongo’s in El Poblado, where it’s been the house specialty for decades. If you’ve never tried tripe, this is the right introduction — the long simmer makes it tender, and the broth carries the dish.

Frijoles Antioqueños

Slow-cooked red beans, often the foundation for the bandeja paisa, sometimes served as a standalone main with rice, fried plantain, and a small grilled meat. Heavier than they sound; perfect for a cool day in Parque Arví.

Sancocho

The Sunday family soup. Typically made with chicken (sancocho de gallina), beef (sancocho de res), or pork; cooked with potato, plantain, yuca, and corn. Served in a big bowl with white rice on the side. Most restaurants only serve sancocho on Saturdays and Sundays.

Sancocho soup

Arepa Variations

Arepa de chocolo is the iconic Antioquian version — a sweet corn cake, often grilled, served with white cheese melted on top. Arepa de huevo (with a fried egg inside) and arepa con queso (cheese-stuffed) are common breakfast variations. The plain arepa paisa, ungrilled, is what you’ll find served alongside most main dishes.

Where to Try Paisa Cuisine

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Cooking & Food Tours

To learn paisa cuisine hands-on, several tours offer market visits + cooking classes: