Beginner's guide to backpacking?
How to find the best local food in any city you arrive in, using systems that work in any language and any context.
The method that works everywhere: walk to a residential neighborhood 10-20 minutes from the tourist center. Find the streets where locals shop — look for produce markets, butchers, small grocery stores. The restaurants in these streets serve the local population, not tourists, and are priced accordingly.
Google Maps as a local restaurant finder: search 'restaurant' in an area away from tourist zones. Sort by rating and look at the number of reviews. A restaurant with 200 reviews averaging 4.3 from a local area is a better indicator than a restaurant with 2,000 reviews averaging 4.5 on the main tourist street (which may be rating-bombed by locals who work there).
The lunch rush indicator: walk through a neighborhood around 12:30-1:30pm (or whenever local lunch happens) and look for where the working-age locals are eating. This is the actual cheap good food.
Hostel staff recommendations: ask specifically 'where do you eat when you're not at work?' This gets a different answer than 'where should tourists go?' The former is local information, the latter is curated tourist information.
The language barrier approach: in a restaurant with no English menu and a language you don't speak, the safest approach is to ask the server what the most popular dish is (point gesture: index finger, questioning expression). You'll get the dish the kitchen does best.
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