Ajvar appears as a signature dish in 1 Serbia cities. See each city's local variant and where to eat it.

Ajvar · Belgrade

Ajvar is the Serbian roasted red pepper relish, blended with aubergine, garlic and oil into a thick spread. The autumn pepper harvest into a year-round Balkan pantry staple.

Ajvar emerged from late-19th-century Belgrade pepper-preserve traditions, codified through 20th-century Yugoslav industrial canning. The Macedonian and southern Serbian (Leskovac) versions are the canonical recipes, built on Kapija pepper varieties roasted over wood fires, peeled by hand and slowly cooked down with garlic and oil across four to six hours. Belgrade home cooks gather to roast peppers each September in courtyard sessions, and the entire harvest of two to three hundred kilograms is processed in a single weekend by extended families. Commercial brands include Centroproizvod and Vitaminka; the Leskovac Ajvar PDO designation protects the southern Serbian production method.

Where to eat in Belgrade: