EAT YOUR WORLD

guides you to the best local dishes & drinks in
125+ cities.
See map now

EYW City Guides

London Food and Travel Guide, by Eat Your WorldGoing somewhere and wish you could take all of a city’s Eat Your World info with you? With EYW’s Kindle and City Guides, you can! Don’t miss out on any local foods or drinks during your next trip.

View available Kindle and City Guides

Join the Project

EYW wants your food photos!

Ethiopian Chicken Stew (Doro Wett)

Ethiopia
amantour

Upload a photo now

Food Memories

EYW wants your food stories!

Book flight at lowest price

massachusetts
lowestflightfare

Hey guys I am a traveler who loves to explore different places around the world. I often visit outside of Canada, So whenever I have to travel around the world I always book my flight tickets from the... Read more

Write a Food Memory now

  • What to eat
  • How to burn it off
  • Where to Stay
<<prev  next>>

<< back to foods in Philadelphia

Soft pretzel

A Philadelphia soft pretzel with mustard from a street cart.

What: The Philadelphia soft pretzel comes in just behind the cheesesteak as most recognizable Philly food, despite the fact that it’s Lancaster County—the heart of Pennsylvania Dutch country—that’s reputed to be the origin of the pretzel in the U.S. Naturally, it’s thanks to German settlers that it’s here at all. But the soft pretzel flourished on the street corners of Philly; it turned out that Philadelphians love them some salted, twisted baked dough. Here, they’re distinguishable by their oddly narrow shape—unlike those of NYC, the pretzels here are squished together, so that the usual four holes are often nonexistent—and their taste and texture: soft and moist, salty and chewy.

Where: The ubiquitous pretzel street vendors are still a decent bet for trying this classic—squirted with yellow mustard, of course. Our photo is from a cart on Sansom Street at S. 15th St. (not that it matters). The only problem with the street guys is that you don’t know just how fresh your pretzel is, so quality can vary wildly.

Alternatively: Go straight to the source—one of them, at least—of those street pretzels by visiting the wholesale/retail Federal Pretzel (638 Federal St., map) in South Philly; it opens at 8am; the earlier you go, the fresher your pretzel. Along the same lines but with even wilder hours is Center City Pretzel Co. (816 Washington Ave.; map), also in South Philly. For guaranteed hot-out-of-the-oven pretzel freshness, go very early in the morning or—depending on your schedule—late at night (open Mon-Fri, midnight-noon; Sat, 4am-noon; Sun, 6:30am-10:30am).

Good to know: The pretzels out in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, are quite different from Philly’s. Lots of hard pretzels are made there, of course, but the soft ones are sweet, fluffy, buttery, and insanely delicious—think Auntie Anne’s, but much better and fresher. You can find them in Philadelphia at the Amish-run Miller’s Twist in Reading Terminal Market (51 N. 12th St.; map).


 



Forgot password